Retinoic acid receptors and retinoid X receptors in the rat testis during fetal and postnatal development: Immunolocalization and implication in the control of the number of gonocytes
B. Boulogne et al., Retinoic acid receptors and retinoid X receptors in the rat testis during fetal and postnatal development: Immunolocalization and implication in the control of the number of gonocytes, BIOL REPROD, 61(6), 1999, pp. 1548-1557
Retinoids have pleiotropic effects on embryonic development and are essenti
al for spermatogenesis in the adult, where they act via nuclear retinoid re
ceptors: retinoic acid receptors (RARs) and retinoid X receptors (RXRs). We
used immunohistochemistry to examine the cellular localization of RARs and
RXRs in the rat testis from Day 13.5 postconception (13.5 dpc) until Day 8
postpartum (8 dpp), and these findings were compared with those for immatu
re and adult testes. RAR alpha and RAR beta were detected in the interstiti
al tissue from 14.5 dpc, with intense staining in the gonocytes from 20.5 d
pc to 8 dpp. The nuclei of all cell types stained faintly for RAR gamma fro
m 8 dpp. Immunoreactivity for RXR alpha was intense in the gonocytes from 1
3.5 dpc and in the Leydig cells from 16.5 dpc, and persisted throughout the
period studied. RXR beta was always detected in the Leydig cells and durin
g a short neonatal period in the gonocytes. RXR gamma gave a faint reaction
in the nuclei of all cell types from 20.5 dpc. Unexpectedly, immunostainin
g for all the receptors tested, except RAR gamma and RXR gamma, was detecte
d in the cytoplasmic compartment of the cells of fetal and neonatal testes,
while it was found in the nuclei in immature and adult testes. In cultures
of dispersed testicular cells from 3 dpp pups, retinoic acid had a dose-de
pendent deleterious effect on the survival of the gonocytes and, to a lesse
r extent, of the somatic cells. These results suggest that retinoids act on
the testicular development, especially on germ cells, via RARs and/or RXRs
.