Abstract

The cytokine activin A is expressed throughout testicular development and is a critical regulator of macrophage function, but its effects on the testicular macrophages are not well-defined. Macrophage distribution and gene transcript levels were examined in testes of adult mice with reduced levels of either activin A (Inhba+/-), or its binding protein, follistatin (TghFST315). Macrophages were identified using F4/80 immunohistochemistry and enumerated by morphometry. Transcript levels were measured in testis extracts by qRT-PCR and Fluidigm ™ analyses. Interstitial macrophages were twice as numerous as peritubular macrophages in Inhba+/- and TghFST315 mice and their littermate controls. Macrophage numbers were significantly reduced in all regions of the Inhba+/- testis, and the volume density of peritubular and subcapsular macrophages was significantly reduced compared to littermate controls (by 52.9% and 36.3% respectively). Transcripts encoding macrophage chemokines, Csf1 and Ccl2, and receptor Csf1r, were elevated (by 35%, 44% and 27% respectively) in Inhba+/- testes, but Cx3cl1 and their receptors, Cx3cr1 and Ccr2, were not altered. Transcripts encoding MHC class II antigens and the co-stimulatory molecule Cd86, also increased (by 32% and 60% respectively), but other co-stimulatory molecules Cd80 and Cd274, and the scavenger receptor Mrc1 (CD206), were unaffected. In the follistatin-deficient testes, macrophage numbers and most macrophage-specific transcripts were not significantly affected, but Mrc1 expression was reduced by 35%. These data indicate that activin A maintains macrophage numbers, but selectively inhibits the levels of key transcripts associated with macrophage antigen-presentation, recruitment and differentiation in the adult mouse testis.

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