Abstract
The modulation of Sertoli cell junctions was studied in the non-seasonal rooster (Gallus domesticus) and in the seasonally breeding mallard duck (Anas platyrynchos anatidae) using thin sectioning, a junction permeability tracer, and freeze-fracture replication. During the active spermatogenic phase, the junctions of the duck appeared similar to those of the rooster, therby establishing the duck as an avian model of seasonal modulation of Sertoli cell junctions. As with mammalian seasonal breeders, during the active phase, occluding, gap, and adhering junctions formed a junctional complex all along the long axis of the Sertoli cell. Unlike in mammals, however, no 7-nm filaments were associated with the occluding junctions. An occluding zonule encircled the Sertoli cell apico-lateral membrane domain situated above the young germ cells, and constituted a barrier to the entry of lanthanum in the basal third of the seminiferous epithelium. Toward the basal side, forming focal junctions were located on the lateral Sertoli cell membrane domain facing the young germ cells. Toward the apical side, dismantling focal junctions were located on the apical Sertoli cell membrane domain facing the older germ cells. During the duck's testicular regression, 7-nm filaments were associated with an occluding junction. In freeze-fracture replicas, each junction was formed by a continuous junctional strand that encircled the apex of the cell. The strands composed a delicate narrow meshwork: an occluding zonule. The blood-testis barrier was localized near the apex of the epithelium. The seasonal reduction in the number of the strands and the changes in their orientation did not coincide with a change in the permeability of the occluding zonule to lanthanum. In addition, the cyclic disappearance of junction-associated filaments was not correlated with a change in the permeability of the junctions but with a change in the affinity of junctional particles for one or the other fracture face. It is proposed that the Sertoli cell plasma membrane domains situated apical and basal with respect to the occluding zonule be considered apical and lateral, respectively. The remaining domain facing the basement membrane would therefore be called basal. In the duck, the occluding zonule is not seasonally shifted from the base to the apex of the Sertoli cell. Instead, it remains stationed above the younger germ cells throughout the year. The illusory shift in the location of the blood-testis barrier during the active phase actually results from the formidable expansion of the Sertoli cell apical membrane domain above the occluding zonule to accommodate the development of germ cells. It follows that the occluding zonules forming the blood-testis barrier in the nonseasonal breeders actually encircle the apices of the Sertoli cells although they occur in the basal third of the seminiferous epithelium.

This publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit: