Fine structure of the testis and epididymis of rats treated with cyproterone acetate

Abstract
Adult male rats were administered the antiandrogen, cyproterone acetate, for 4, 8 or 12 weeks, and the histology and fine structure of the testis and several parts of the epididymis were studied. After treatment for 8 or 12 weeks, the testes of treated animals displayed a great reduction in the abundance of late spermatids. Necrotic cells, many of which were identified as cap‐phase spermatids, were present in the seminiferous epithelium. Sertoli cells contained many large lipid droplets and lysosome‐like structures with a content of cellular debris, including parts of spermatids. Leydig cells of treated rats were smaller than those of control animals at all the intervals studied. Sperm were absent from the lumen of the middle segment, or caput epididymidis, of severely affected specimens. In the terminal segment, or cauda epididymidis, the microscopic appearance varied in different regions. In the proximal part of the cauda epididymidis, the lumen was usually clear of sperm. The epithelium was tall and the light cells were very large and distended with many dense bodies resembling lysosomes. In contrast, in the distal part of the cauda epididymidis, the lumen was filled with sperm and debris, which appeared to be derived from germ cells. It is suggested that the light cells of the epididymal epithelium may have a role in clearing the lumen in the proximal part of the cauda epididymidis, in which they are particularly large and numerous. The results suggest that in the presence of cyproterone acetate, germ cells develop up to cap‐phase spermatids and then begin to undergo degeneration and death. This alteration may have an important role in the antifertility effect of the drug, but changes in the epididymis may contribute also.