Quantitative detection of human spermatogonia for optimization of spermatogonial stem cell culture

被引:42
|
作者
Zheng, Y. [1 ]
Thomas, A. [1 ]
Schmidt, C. M. [1 ]
Dann, C. T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Indiana Univ, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
关键词
germ cells; testis; cell culture; fertility; stage-specific embryonic antigens; LONG-TERM PROLIFERATION; IN-VITRO PROPAGATION; SELF-RENEWAL; MOUSE; TRANSPLANTATION; IDENTIFICATION; EXPANSION; PROTEINS; TESTIS;
D O I
10.1093/humrep/deu232
中图分类号
R71 [妇产科学];
学科分类号
100211 ;
摘要
Can human spermatogonia be detected in long-term primary testicular cell cultures using validated, germ cell-specific markers of spermatogonia? Germ cell-specific markers of spermatogonia/spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) are detected in early (1-2 weeks) but not late (> 6 weeks) primary testicular cell cultures; somatic cell markers are detected in late primary testicular cell cultures. The development of conditions for human SSC culture is critically dependent on the ability to define cell types unequivocally and to quantify spermatogonia/SSCs. Growth by somatic cells presents a major challenge in the establishment of SSC cultures and therefore markers that define spermatogonia/SSCs, but are not also expressed by testicular somatic cells, are essential for accurate characterization of SSC cultures. Testicular tissue from eight organ donors with normal spermatogenesis was used for assay validation and establishing primary testicular cell cultures. Immunofluorescence analysis of normal human testicular tissue was used to validate antibodies (UTF1, SALL4, DAZL and VIM) and then the antibodies were used to demonstrate that primary testicular cells cultured in vitro for 1-2 weeks were composed of somatic cells and rare germ cells. Primary testicular cell cultures were further characterized by comparing to testicular somatic cell cultures using quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (UTF1, FGFR3, ZBTB16, GPR125, DAZL, GATA4 and VIM) and flow cytometry (CD9 and SSEA4). UTF1, FGFR3, DAZL and ZBTB16 qRT-PCR and SSEA4 flow cytometry were validated for the sensitive, quantitative and specific detection of germ cells. In contrast, GPR125 mRNA and CD9 were found to be not specific to germ cells because they were also expressed in testicular somatic cell cultures. While the germ cell-specific markers were detected in early primary testicular cell cultures (1-2 weeks), their expression steadily declined over time in vitro. After 6 weeks in culture only somatic cells were detected. Different groups attempting SSC culture have utilized different sources of human testes and minor differences in the preparation and maintenance of the testicular cell cultures. Differences in outcome may be explained by genetic background of the source tissue or technical differences. The ability to propagate human SSCs in vitro is a prerequisite for proposed autologous transplantation therapy aimed at restoring fertility to men who have been treated for childhood cancer. By applying the assays validated here it will be possible to quantitatively compare human SSC culture conditions. The eventual development of conditions for long-term propagation of human SSCs in vitro will greatly facilitate learning about the basic biology of these cells and in turn the ability to use human SSCs in therapy.
引用
收藏
页码:2497 / 2511
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Maintenance of adult mouse type A spermatogonia in vitro:: influence of serum and growth factors and comparison with prepubertal spermatogonial cell culture
    Creemers, LB
    den Ouden, K
    van Pelt, AMM
    de Rooij, DG
    REPRODUCTION, 2002, 124 (06) : 791 - 799
  • [42] Isolation and culture of human spermatogonial stem cells (SSCS) from testicular tissues
    Kobayashi, Hideyuki
    Nagao, Koichi
    Kataoka, Kazuyoshi
    Yamabe, Fumito
    Nakajima, Koichi
    Nagata, Masato
    Takasugi, Keiichiro
    Ohira, Tadashi
    Kurita, Minoru
    Hara, Hiroshi
    Miura, Kazukiyo
    Ishii, Nobuhisa
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2007, 177 (04): : 616 - 616
  • [43] Purification and Culture of Sheep Spermatogonial Stem Cells
    Wu, Yingji
    Luo, Fenhua
    Zhang, Yan
    Wu, Sachula
    Liu, Linhong
    Batu, Baiyin
    Hou, Yue
    Hu, Tianyuan
    BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION, 2011, 85
  • [44] Xeno-free culture of human spermatogonial stem cells supported by human embryonic stem cell-derived fibroblast-like cells
    Chen, Bin
    Wang, Yu-Bin
    Zhang, Zhi-Ling
    Xia, Wei-Liang
    Wang, Hong-Xiang
    Xiang, Zu-Qiong
    Hu, Kai
    Han, Yin-Fa
    Wang, Yi-Xin
    Huang, Yi-Ran
    Wang, Zheng
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF ANDROLOGY, 2009, 11 (05) : 557 - 565
  • [45] Isolation, Characterization, and Culture of Human Spermatogonia
    He, Zuping
    Kokkinaki, Maria
    Jiang, Jiji
    Dobrinski, Ina
    Dym, Martin
    BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION, 2010, 82 (02) : 363 - 372
  • [46] Culture and transplantation of bovine spermatogonial stem cells
    Izadyar, F
    Creemers, LB
    den Ouden, K
    de Rooij, DG
    ANDROLOGY IN THE 21ST CENTURY, SHORT COMMUNICATIONS, 2001, : 149 - 155
  • [47] Optimization of decellularized human placental macroporous scaffolds for spermatogonial stem cells homing
    Asgari, Fatemeh
    Asgari, Hamid Reza
    Najafi, Mohammad
    Eftekhari, Behnaz Sadat
    Vardiani, Mina
    Gholipourmalekabadi, Mazaher
    Koruji, Morteza
    JOURNAL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE-MATERIALS IN MEDICINE, 2021, 32 (05)
  • [48] Optimization of decellularized human placental macroporous scaffolds for spermatogonial stem cells homing
    Fatemeh Asgari
    Hamid Reza Asgari
    Mohammad Najafi
    Behnaz Sadat Eftekhari
    Mina Vardiani
    Mazaher Gholipourmalekabadi
    Morteza Koruji
    Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine, 2021, 32
  • [49] CHARACTERISTICS OF THE NICHE REQUIRED FOR HUMAN SPERMATOGONIAL STEM CELL EXPANSION.
    Yango, P. L.
    Smith, J. F.
    Altman, E.
    Poelzl, A.
    Lishko, P. V.
    Tran, N. D.
    FERTILITY AND STERILITY, 2013, 100 (03) : S42 - S42
  • [50] SINGLE-CELL TRANSCRIPTOME ANALYSIS OF HUMAN SPERMATOGONIAL STEM CELLS
    Song, Hye-Won
    Hsieh, Tung-Chin
    Hammoud, Sue
    Wilkinson, Miles
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2018, 199 (04): : E653 - E653