Structural response of adult rat sertoli cells to peritubular fibroblasts in vitro

Abstract
Sertoli cells were harvested from sexually mature rats and maintained in vitro for up to ten days (Sertoli cell‐enriched cultures) or co‐cultured with rat peritubular fibroblasts. Cultures were examined by differential light microscopy and by scanning or transmission electron microscopy. The presence of peritubular fibroblasts in co‐culture greatly enhanced plating efficiency and viability of adult Sertoli cells. Sertoli cell aggregates preferentially adhered to peritubular cells, and by ten days had flattened and spread across these cells. Sertoli cells retained their characteristic ultrastructural features. Early in co‐culture a collagen‐like extracellular material was seen bridging Sertoli and peritubular cells, and its appearance was coincident with the presence of swollen rough endoplasmic reticulum in peritubular cells. Interperitubular cell spaces became engorged with a fibrillar material morphologically similar to the basal lamina of the seminiferous tubule wall. In the absence of peritubular cells, in culture medium “conditioned” by prior incubation with peritubular cells but not containing them, or when cultured with other fibroblastic cells, plating efficiency was low; Sertoli cells never flattened and cell ultrastructure progressively degenerated. The results indicate that peritubular cells support adult Sertoh cells in culture, possibly via extracellular material derived from peritubular cells, and suggest that Sertoli cells have an inductive effect on peritubular cell secretory activity.