Abstract

Busulfan kills spermatogonia with the exception of a few that are attached to the basal membrane of the seminiferous epithelium. In mice, these remaining spermatogonia reacted strongly to a goat anti-mouse IgG antibody. Spermatogonia in untreated testes rarely showed the same reactivity. Testicular IgG levels are normally minimal but increase markedly, 4 weeks after busulfan treatment before peaking at week 6. Laser scanning cytometry analysis of control and busulfan-treated testicular cells showed busulfan treatment increased the frequency of cells that were positive for not only IgG (from 0.67 ± 0.29 to 16.5 ± 3.8%) but also for α6-integrin, β1-integrin, GFR(-1 and/or Ret. Thus, an enrichment in putative male stem cells correlates with appearance of IgG expression. Confocal microscopy revealed busulfan-treated cells contained both IgG and GFRα-1, and that the initial surface IgG became intracellular in the weeks following busulfan treatment. The basement membranes of the seminiferous tubules were compromised by busulfan treatment as the mRNA expression profiles of various adhesion molecules in the basement membranes were altered and electron microscopy revealed severe damage. Serum IgG levels increased in a manner corresponding with the increase in testicular IgG levels. Thus, it appears that in the busulfan-treated testis, small breaches of the blood-testis barrier leak IgG that is then taken up by a significant number of spermatogonia. When the busulfan-resistant germ cells were transferred into recipient germ cell-depleted testes, they settled and repopulated the recipient testes. Thus, the IgG-bearing cells observed after busulfan treatment may be putative spermatogonial stem cells.

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