Abstract

Enzymatic digestion of the interstitial tissue of early juvenile and adult rat testes resulted in an enrichment of the Leydig cell population. The cells of the intertubular preparation from adult testes were separated by centrifugal elutriation, according to differences in sedimentation velocity, a counter-flow centrifugation technique leading to 70% Leydig cell purity. Using this approach, it was possible to demonstrate that Leydig cells from adult testes contain only low affinity isoenzymes of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase (PDE; E.C.: 3.1.4.17), an intracellular regulator of cAMP. Starch gel electrophoresis showed that the isozyme of cAMP PDe of Leydig cells is masked in crude testis homogenates due to the relatively low level of these cells in the total population. In Leydig cells, there are two different electrophoretic forms expressed which resemble two of eleven different molecular forms of cAMP PDE demonstrated for comparison in 21 different organs of the adult rat. An interstitial cell preparation from early juvenile testes, with a Leydig cell content of up to 20%, was also investigated electrophoretically with regard to molecular forms of cAMP PDE, the properties of which were characterized by kinetics analysis of cAMP hydrolysis. The results presented are discussed in relation to the onset of testosterone synthesis in Leydig cells of prepubertal rats leading to the initiation of male puberty.

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