• 1 January 1980
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 69 (4), 297-318
Abstract
The very 1st stages of testicular organogenesis in the rat., i.e., the initial stages of formation of the seminiferous cords, were studied. It takes over and extends the results of a previous histological study (JOST). The tissues were fixed with glutaraldehyde or glutaraldehyde-paraformaldehyde and post-fixed with osmium tetroxide. Examination with the optical microscope of semi-thick sections confirms that the differentiation begins 13 days after fertilization; an increasing number of primitive Sertoli cells appear, first in the depth of the gonad, join each other and form the seminiferous cords. EM revealed 3 characteristic criteria of the early differentiation of the Sertoli cells, i.e., an abundant cytoplasm, only slightly dense to electrons and containing short laminae or vesicles of rough endoplasmic reticulum; complex contact zones involving infoldings and interdigitations of the membranes; and a layer of microfilaments beneath the flattened surface of the cells, that limits the outer surface of the seminiferous cords. These differentiation processes taking place at the 13 day stage are described.