Abstract

Postnatal differentiation of the peritubular myoid cells in mouse testis is hormone dependent. In order to analyse the differentiation of the peritubular tissue, an attempt was made to develop an experimental model system utilizing an in vitro method. Fragments obtained from adult, 7- or 10-day-old mice, were cultured in McCoy's modified 5a medium for 9–19 days. The fragments and monolayers that grew from them were examined with the electron microscope at the end of the culture period. Monolayers originating from either mature or immature testicular expiants were comparable in appearance. They were composed of spindle-shaped cells that contained abundant profiles of granular endoplasmic reticulum and free ribosomes, as well as arrays of 40–60 Å thick filaments and associated dense bodies. In these respects they resembled smooth muscle cells in culture, in developmental, and in pathological conditions. Examination of the peritubular tissue in the testicular explants indicated that the monolayer of myoid cells originated from the fibroblasts rather than the peritubular myoid cells. Peritubular cells in explants from mature rats retained their myoid features at the end of the culture period but myoid cell differentiation failed to progress in expiants obtained from immature animals. Additional work is necessary in order to establish the suitability of these preliminary culture attempts to support normal development before conclusions may be drawn concerning the role of hormones in myoid cell differentiation. The role of microfilaments as a contractile organelle of cells is discussed.

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