Abstract

Proper regulation of spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) is crucial for sustaining steady-state spermatogenesis. Previous work has identified several paracrine factors involved in this regulation, in particular, glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor and fibroblast growth factor 2, which promote long-term SSC self-renewal. Using a SSC culture system, we have recently reported that Wnt5a promotes SSC self-renewal through a β-catenin-independent Wnt mechanism whereas the β-catenin-dependent Wnt pathway is not active in SSCs. In contrast, another study has reported that Wnt3a promotes SSC self-renewal through the β-catenin-dependent pathway, as it can stimulate the proliferation of a spermatogonia cell line. To reconcile these two contradictory reports, we assessed Wnt3a effects on SSCs and progenitor cells, rather than a cell line, in vitro. We observed that Wnt3a induced β-catenin-dependent signalling in a large subset of germ cells and increased SSC numbers. However, further investigation revealed that cell populations with greater β-catenin-signalling activity contained fewer SSCs. The increased maintenance of SSCs by Wnt3a coincided with more active cell cycling and the formation of germ cell aggregates, or communities, under feeder-free conditions. Therefore, the results of this study suggest that Wnt3a selectively stimulates proliferation of progenitors that are committed to differentiation or are in the process of exiting the SSC state, leading to enhanced formation of germ cell communities, which indirectly support SSCs and act as an in vitro niche.

Highlights

  • Spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) are the foundation of life-long spermatogenesis

  • It has been shown that differentiated germ cells can regain stem cell activity upon homing back to hub cells suggesting the inductive nature of the Drosophila testis niche [3]

  • This cell line is immunophenotypically similar to SSCs but has not been functionally tested as SSCs using spermatogonial transplantation

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Summary

Introduction

Spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) are the foundation of life-long spermatogenesis. SSCs have the unique ability to maintain the stem cell pool through self-renewing divisions as well as to generate daughter cells committed to differentiation thereby producing mature sperm. This fate decision is believed to be tightly regulated during steady-state spermatogenesis and occurs in a specialized microenvironment, referred to as the niche, which supports SSCs [1]. It has been shown that differentiated germ cells can regain stem cell activity upon homing back to hub cells suggesting the inductive nature of the Drosophila testis niche [3]

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