Nondividing, Postpubertal Rat Sertoli Cells Resumed Proliferation after Transplantation<sup><a href="#n102" rid="n102" class=" fn">1</a></sup>
ABSTRACT
Conventionally, it was believed that Sertoli cells (SC) stopped proliferating at puberty and became terminally differentiated quiescent cells. However, recent studies have challenged that dogma. In this study, we transplanted nondividing SC isolated from 23- to 27-day-old postpubertal rats transduced with a recombinant adenoviral vector (containing furin-modified human proinsulin cDNA) into diabetic severe combined immunodeficiency mice. Immunostaining the grafts for cell proliferation markers, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and MKI67, revealed that transplanted SC within the grafts were proliferating. Possible causes for resumption of proliferation of SC could be viral transduction, cell isolation and culture, higher abdominal temperature at the transplant site, and/or transplantation. To test for these possible causes, double- immunofluorescence staining was performed for GATA4 (SC marker) and MKI67. None of the SC were positive for MKI67 in tissue collected during SC isolation and culture or at higher temperature. However, nontransduced SC stained positive for MKI67 after transplantation into rats, suggesting viral transduction was not a key factor for induction of SC proliferation. Interestingly, resumption in proliferative ability of nondividing SC was temporary, as SC stopped proliferating within 14 days of transplantation and did not proliferate thereafter. Quantification of 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine-labeled SC demonstrated that 7%–9% of the total transplanted SC were proliferating in the grafts. These data indicate for the first time that nondividing SC resumed proliferation after transplantation and further validate previous findings that SC are not terminally differentiated. Hence, transplantation of SC could provide a useful model with which to study the regulation of SC proliferation in vivo.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
We thank the Vector Core, Gene Therapy Program, Division of Medical Genetics, Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, for providing the adenoviral construct.
Footnotes
Supported in part by National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant HD067400 to J.M.D. from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Development. B.B. was a recipient of a Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine Summer Research Fellowship. N.J.P. was supported by the NIH Plains Bridges to the Baccalaureate Program. Presented in part at the 42nd and 45th Annual Meetings of the Society for the Study of Reproduction, Pittsburgh and State College, Pennsylvania, July 18–22, 2009 and August 12–15, 2012, respectively.
These authors contributed equally to this work.





