INTERMEDIATE-SIZED FILAMENTS PRESENT IN SERTOLI CELLS ARE OF THE VIMENTIN TYPE
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 19 (3), 269-275
Abstract
The cytoplasmic structure of Sertoli cells of rat testes was studied by EM of ultrathin sections. Sertoli cells contain numerous intermediate-sized (7-11 nm) filaments which form a meshwork extending throughout the whole cytoplasm. Often the frequency of such filaments appears especially high in juxtanuclear and cortical regions, including the apical recesses containing the spermatids. Examination of frozen sections of testes by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using guinea pig antibodies to prekeratin and vimentin has shown the absence of intermediate-sized filaments of the cytokeratin type in all cells of the testes but the presence of filaments of the vimentin type in Sertoli cells as well as in cells of the interstitial space. The intermediate-sized filaments, abundant in Sertoli cells, are of the vimentin type. The germ epithelium differs from other true epithelia by the absence of cytokeratin filaments and typical desmosomes and, in Sertoli cells, the presence of vimentin filaments, suggestive of a mesenchymal character or derivation.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immunofluorescent Visualization of 100 Å Filaments in Different Cultured Chick Embryo Cell TypesDifferentiation, 1979
- Immunofluorescent staining of keratin fibers in cultured cellsCell, 1978
- MODIFIED DESMOSOMES IN CULTURED EPITHELIAL-CELLS1978
- Immunological Distinction between Neurofilament and Glial Fibrillary Acidic Proteins by Mouse Antisera and Their Immunohistological Characterization (Part 1 of 2)Developmental Neuroscience, 1978
- Studies on the function and composition of the 10-nm(100- å) filaments of vertebrate smooth muscleJournal of Cell Science, 1977
- Immunological characterization of the subunit of the 100 A filaments from muscle cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1976
- The Sertoli cell occluding junctions and gap junctions in mature and developing mammalian testisDevelopmental Biology, 1976