Sharpe R M, Maddocks S, Kerr J B
MRC Reproductive Biology Unit, Centre for Reproductive Biology, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Am J Anat. 1990 May;188(1):3-20. doi: 10.1002/aja.1001880103.
This review centers around studies which have used ethane dimethane sulphonate (EDS) selectively to destroy all of the Leydig cells in the adult rat testis. With additional manipulations such as testosterone replacement and/or experimental induction of severe seminiferous tubule damage in EDS-injected rats, the following questions have been addressed: 1) What are the roles and relative importance of testosterone and other non-androgenic Leydig cell products in normal spermatogenesis and testicular function in general? 2) What are the factors controlling Leydig cell proliferation and maturation? 3) Is it the Leydig cells or the seminiferous tubules (or both) which control the testicular vasculature? The findings emphasize that in the normal adult rat testis there is a complex interaction between the Leydig cells, the Sertoli (and/or peritubular) cells, the germ cells, and the vasculature, and that testosterone, but not other Leydig cell products, plays a central role in many of these interactions. The Leydig cells drive spermatogenesis via the secretion of testosterone which acts on the Sertoli and/or peritubular cells to create an environment which enables normal progression of germ cells through stage VII of the spermatogenic cycle. In addition, testosterone is involved in the control of the vasculature, and hence the formation of testicular interstitial fluid, presumably again via effects on the Sertoli and/or peritubular cells. When Leydig cells regenerate and mature after their destruction by EDS, it can be shown that both the rate and the location of regenerating Leydig cells is determined by an interplay between endocrine (LH and perhaps FSH) and paracrine factors; the latter emanate from the seminiferous tubules and are determined by the germ cell complement. Taken together with other data on the paracrine control of Leydig cell testosterone secretion by the seminiferous tubules, these findings demonstrate that the functions of all of the cell types in the testis are interwoven in a highly organized manner. This has considerable implications with regard to the concentration of research effort on in vitro studies of the testis, and is discussed together with the need for a multidisciplinary approach if the complex control of spermatogenesis is ever to be properly understood.
本综述围绕一些研究展开,这些研究使用乙烷二甲磺酸盐(EDS)选择性地破坏成年大鼠睾丸中的所有莱迪希细胞。通过额外的操作,如在注射EDS的大鼠中进行睾酮替代和/或实验性诱导严重的生精小管损伤,探讨了以下问题:1)睾酮和其他非雄激素性莱迪希细胞产物在正常精子发生和一般睾丸功能中的作用及相对重要性是什么?2)控制莱迪希细胞增殖和成熟的因素有哪些?3)是莱迪希细胞还是生精小管(或两者)控制睾丸血管系统?研究结果强调,在正常成年大鼠睾丸中,莱迪希细胞、支持细胞(和/或睾丸周细胞)、生殖细胞和血管系统之间存在复杂的相互作用,并且睾酮而非其他莱迪希细胞产物在许多这些相互作用中起核心作用。莱迪希细胞通过分泌睾酮驱动精子发生,睾酮作用于支持细胞和/或睾丸周细胞,营造一个能使生殖细胞在生精周期的VII期正常进展的环境。此外,睾酮参与血管系统的控制,从而参与睾丸间质液的形成,推测也是通过对支持细胞和/或睾丸周细胞的作用。当莱迪希细胞在被EDS破坏后再生和成熟时,可以表明再生莱迪希细胞的速率和位置由内分泌(促黄体生成素,可能还有促卵泡生成素)和旁分泌因子之间的相互作用决定;后者来自生精小管,并由生殖细胞组成决定。结合其他关于生精小管对莱迪希细胞睾酮分泌的旁分泌控制的数据,这些发现表明睾丸中所有细胞类型的功能以高度有组织的方式相互交织。这对于将研究精力集中在睾丸的体外研究方面具有重要意义,并与如果想要正确理解精子发生的复杂控制就需要多学科方法的必要性一起进行了讨论。