About Us |
PMID | 29123028 |
Gene Name | IGSF11 |
Condition | Male infertility |
Association |
Associated |
Sex | Male |
Infertility type | Male infertility |
Other associated phenotypes |
Male infertility |
The cell adhesion molecule BT-IgSF is essential for a functional blood-testis barrier and male fertility in mice Pelz L, Purfürst B, Rathjen FG. The Ig-like cell adhesion molecule (IgCAM) BT-IgSF (brain- and testis-specific Ig superfamily protein) plays a major role in male fertility in mice. However, the molecular mechanism by which BT-IgSF supports fertility is unclear. Here, we found that it is localized in Sertoli cells at the blood-testis barrier (BTB) and at the apical ectoplasmic specialization. The absence of BT-IgSF in Sertoli cells in both global and conditional mouse mutants (i.e. AMHCre and Rosa26CreERT2 lines) resulted in male infertility, atrophic testes with vacuolation, azoospermia, and spermatogenesis arrest. Although transcripts of junctional proteins such as connexin43, ZO-1, occludin, and claudin11 were up-regulated in the absence of BT-IgSF, the functional integrity of the BTB was impaired, as revealed by injection of a BTB-impermeable component into the testes under in vivo conditions. Disruption of the BTB coincided with mislocalization of connexin43, which was present throughout the seminiferous epithelium and not restricted to the BTB as in wild-type tissues, suggesting impaired cell-cell communication in the BT-IgSF-KO mice. Because EM images revealed a normal BTB structure between Sertoli cells in the BT-IgSF-KO mice, we conclude that infertility in these mice is most likely caused by a functionally impaired BTB. In summary, our results indicate that BT-IgSF is expressed at the BTB and is required for male fertility by supporting the functional integrity of the BTB. CI - © 2017 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. FAU - Pelz, Laura AU - Pelz L AD - From the Department of Neurobiology and. FAU - Purfürst, Bettina AU - Purfürst B AD - the Core Facility for Electron Microscopy, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, Helmholtz Association, D-13092 Berlin, Germany. |