Expression of a Testis-Specific Nuclear Protein, TRA98, in Mouse Testis during Spermatogenesis. A Quantitative and Qualitative Immunoelectron Microscopy (IEM) Analysis
Natsuki Inoue, Yuko Onohara, Sadaki Yokota
DOI: 10.4236/ojcb.2011.11002   PDF    HTML     5,047 Downloads   18,165 Views   Citations

Abstract

TRA98 is a testis-specific nuclear protein, but its biological role is unclear. We analyzed the localization of TRA98 in developing spermatogenic cells using immunofluorescence (IF) and immunoelectron microscopy (IEM). TRA98 was localized exclusively to the nuclei. In spermatocytes, IF staining was associated with certain sub-nuclear structures to show a reticular pattern; the XY body was strongly stained. In spermatids, both reticular and punctate staining patterns were observed. In late spermatids, staining decreased as cell dif-ferentiation proceeded. However, epididymal sperm were strongly stained when smear preparations were not fixed, or followed by treatment with 4 M urea or 2% mercaptoethanol. IEM showed that gold signals were closely associated with electron-dense masses but not with the nucleoli. We then investigated the expression of TRA98 in differentiating spermatocytes using a quantitative IEM technique. A small expression peak was observed around stage II-III and a second large peak was noted at stage XI. In spermatids, a single expres-sion peak was observed at step 5; labeling density then decreased gradually but did not reach zero. In early spermatids, heterochromatin was stained much more than euchromatin. The results suggest that the function of TRA98 increases at three points during spermatogenesis. In addition, TRA98 is maintained in the sperm head and carried into the egg after fertilization.

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N. Inoue, Y. Onohara and S. Yokota, "Expression of a Testis-Specific Nuclear Protein, TRA98, in Mouse Testis during Spermatogenesis. A Quantitative and Qualitative Immunoelectron Microscopy (IEM) Analysis," Open Journal of Cell Biology, Vol. 1 No. 1, 2011, pp. 11-20. doi: 10.4236/ojcb.2011.11002.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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