Synchronization of the seminiferous epithelium after vitamin A replacement in vitamin A-deficient mice

AMM van Pelt, DG de Rooij - Biology of reproduction, 1990 - academic.oup.com
AMM van Pelt, DG de Rooij
Biology of reproduction, 1990academic.oup.com
The effect of vitamin A deficiency and vitamin A replacement on spermatogenesis was
studied in mice. Breeding pairs of Cpb-N mice were given a vitamin A-deficient diet for at
least 4 wk. The born male mice received the same diet and developed signs of vitamin A
deficiency at the age of 14–16 wk. At that time, only Sertoli cells and A spermatogonia were
present in the seminiferous epithelium. These spermatogonia were topographically
arranged as single and paired cells and as clones of 4, 8 and more cells. A few mitoses of …
Abstract
The effect of vitamin A deficiency and vitamin A replacement on spermatogenesis was studied in mice. Breeding pairs of Cpb-N mice were given a vitamin A-deficient diet for at least 4 wk. The born male mice received the same diet and developed signs of vitamin A deficiency at the age of 14–16 wk. At that time, only Sertoli cells and A spermatogonia were present in the seminiferous epithelium. These spermatogonia were topographically arranged as single and paired cells and as clones of 4, 8 and more cells. A few mitoses of single, paired, and clones of 4 A spermatogonia were found, which were randomly distributed over the seminiferous epithelium.
When vitamin A-deficient mice were treated with retinol-acetate combined with a normal vitamin A-containing diet, spermatogenesis restarted again synchronously. Only a few successive stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium were present up to at least 43 days after vitamin A replacement. After 20 days, 98.3% of the seminiferous tubules were synchronized, showing pachytene spermatocytes as the most advanced cell type, mostly being in epithelium stages IX–XII. After 35 and 43 days, spermatogenesis was complete in 99.6% of the tubular cross sections, and most tubular cross sections were in stages IV–VII of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. The degree of synchronization was comparable or even higher than found in rats.
The rate of development of the spermatogenic cells between 8 and 43 days after vitamin A replacement seemed to be similar to that in normal mice. Assuming that the rate of development of the spermatogenic cells is also normal during the first 8 days after vitamin A replacement, it can be deduced that the preleptotene spermatocytes, present after 8 days, were A spermatogonia in the beginning of stage VIII at the moment of vitamin A replacement. These results indicate that the mouse can be used as a model to study epithelial stage-dependent processes in the testis.
Oxford University Press