The localization of ERα and ERß in rat testis and epididymis

The localization of ERα and ERß in rat testis and epididymis

Aim: It is an indisputable fact that estrogens are essential for the normal functioning of the male reproductive system. Although there are many studies investigating the localization of estrogen receptor α (ERα) and estrogen receptor ß (ERß) in the testis and epididymis, there is no consensus between the results of these studies. Therefore, in this study, it was aimed to investigate the ERα and ERß expression pattern in testis and epididymis using immunohistochemical methods. Material and Methods: The testis and epididymis tissues removed from 3 adult rats after anesthetized with ether. Then the tissues fixed in Bouin's fixative. The tissues embedded in paraffin were cut 5 μm thickness with microtomeand stained with immunohistochemical methods. Results: In the testis, ERα-positive immunostaining was observed in the nuclei of peritubular myoid cells and in the cytoplasm of Leydig cells. The germ cells other than spermatogonium and spermatid were ERα-negative. ERβ-positive immunoreaction was detected in the nuclei of spermatogonia, peritubular myoid cells and Leydig cells. The cells in which ERα and ERβ positive immunostaining were seen most intensively were spermatogonia. ER (α and ß) positive immunostaining in the epididymis was observed in epithelial cells and interstitial stromal cells. Although most of the epithelial cells (principal, basal, apical) were ERα and ER β positive staining, others were negative.Conclusion: The results obtained in this study showed that ERα and ERß are localized in somatic and germ cells in the testis and epithelial and stromal cells in the epididymis. In this study, it was observed that ERα and ERß staining intensity in spermatogoniums was higher than other cells. This result can be interpreted that estrogens perform their effects on the testis mainly through spermatogonia. The presence of ER (α and ß) in testis and epididymis, support the view that estrogens play an important role in the development and maintenance of male reproductive functions and fertility.

___

  • 1. Sharpe RM. Do males rely on female hormones? Nature 1997;390:447-8.
  • 2. Sharpe RM. The roles of oestrogen in the male. Trends Endocrinol Metab 1998;9:371-7.
  • 3. Couse JF, Korach KS. Estrogen receptor null mice: what have we learned and where will they lead us? Endocr Rev 1999;20:358-417.
  • 4. O'Donnell L, Robertson KM, Jones ME, et al. Estrogen and spermatogenesis. Endocr Rev 2001;22:289-318.
  • 5. Tsai M, Clark J, Schrader W, et al. Mechanisms of action of hormones that act as transcription factors. 9 ed. Wilson JD, Foster DW, Kronenberg HM, Larsen PM, editors. Philadelphia:: Saunders 1998.
  • 6. Carreau S, Lambard S, Delalande C, et al. Aromatase expression and role of estrogens in male gonad : a review. Reprod Biol Endocrinol 2003;1:35.
  • 7. Mangelsdorf DJ, Thummel C, Beato M, et al. The nuclear receptor superfamily: the second decade. Cell 1995;83:835-9.
  • 8. Nilsson S, Gustafsson JA. Estrogen receptors: therapies targeted to receptor subtypes. Clin Pharmacol Ther 2011;89:44-55.
  • 9. Pelletier G, Labrie C, Labrie F. Localization of oestrogen receptor alpha, oestrogen receptor beta and androgen receptors in the rat reproductive organs. J Endocrinol 2000;165:359-70.
  • 10. Nie R, Zhou Q, Jassim E, et al. Differential expression of estrogen receptors alpha and beta in the reproductive tracts of adult male dogs and cats. Biol Reprod 2002;66:1161-8.
  • 11. Taylor AH, Al-Azzawi F. Immunolocalisation of oestrogen receptor beta in human tissues. J Mol Endocrinol 2000;24:145-55.
  • 12. Zhou Q, Nie R, Prins GS, et al. Localization of androgen and estrogen receptors in adult male mouse reproductive tract. J Androl 2002;23:870-81.
  • 13. Saunders PT, Sharpe RM, Williams K, et al. Differential expression of oestrogen receptor alpha and beta proteins in the testes and male reproductive system of human and non-human primates. Mol Hum Reprod 2001;7:227-36.
  • 14. Goyal HO, Bartol FF, Wiley AA, et al. Immunolocalization of androgen receptor and estrogen receptor in the developing testis and excurrent ducts of goats. Anat Rec 1997;249:54-62.
  • 15. Gould ML, Hurst PR, Nicholson HD. The effects of oestrogen receptors alpha and beta on testicular cell number and steroidogenesis in mice. Reproduction 2007;134:271-9.
  • 16. Pelletier G, El-Alfy M. Immunocytochemical localization of estrogen receptors alpha and beta in the human reproductive organs. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2000;85:4835-40.
  • 17. Saunders PT, Fisher JS, Sharpe RM, et al. Expression of oestrogen receptor beta (ER beta) occurs in multiple cell types, including some germ cells, in the rat testis. J Endocrinol 1998;156:13-7.
  • 18. Fisher JS, Millar MR, Majdic G, et al. Immunolocalisation of oestrogen receptor-alpha within the testis and excurrent ducts of the rat and marmoset monkey from perinatal life to adulthood. J Endocrinol 1997;153:485- 95.
  • 19. Atanassova N, McKinnell C, Williams K, et al. Age- , cell- and region-specific immunoexpression of estrogen receptor alpha (but not estrogen receptor beta) during postnatal development of the epididymis and vas deferens of the rat and disruption of this pattern by neonatal treatment with diethylstilbestrol. Endocrinology 2001;142:874-86.
  • 20. Zaya R, Hennick C, Pearl CA. In vitro expression of androgen and estrogen receptors in prepubertal and adult rat epididymis. Gen Comp Endocrinol 2012;178:573-86.
  • 21. Yamashita S. Localization of estrogen and androgen receptors in male reproductive tissues of mice and rats. Anat Rec A Discov Mol Cell Evol Biol 2004;279:768-78.
  • 22. Kolasa A, Wiszniewska B, Marchlewicz M, et al. Localisation of oestrogen receptors (ERalpha and ERbeta) in the human and rat epididymides. Folia Morphol (Warsz) 2003;62:467-9.
  • 23. Hess RA, Bunick D, Lee KH, et al. A role for oestrogens in the male reproductive system. Nature 1997;390:509- 12.
  • 24. Korach KS. Insights from the study of animals lacking functional estrogen receptor. Science 1994;266:1524- 7.
  • 25. Lubahn DB, Moyer JS, Golding TS, et al. Alteration of reproductive function but not prenatal sexual development after insertional disruption of the mouse estrogen receptor gene. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1993;90:11162-6.
  • 26. Jenkins AD, Lechene CP, Howards SS. The effect of estrogen administration in vivo on the elemental composition of the intraluminal fluids of the seminiferous tubules, rete testis, and epididymis of the rat. J Androl 1983;4:272-5.
  • 27. Setty BS, Jehan Q, Srivastava A, et al. Biological response of the rat epididymis to estrogen. Exp Clin Endocrinol 1986;87:229-38.
  • 28. Toppari J, Larsen JC, Christiansen P, et al. Male reproductive health and environmental xenoestrogens. Environ Health Perspect. 1996;104:741-803.
  • 29. Hess RA, Fernandes SA, Gomes GR, et al. Estrogen and its receptors in efferent ductules and epididymis. J Androl 2011;32:600-13.
  • 30. Filipiak E, Suliborska D, Laszczynska M, et al. Estrogen receptor alpha localization in the testes of men with normal spermatogenesis. Folia Histochem Cytobiol 2013;50:340-5.
  • 31. Oliveira CA, Nie R, Carnes K, et al. The antiestrogen ICI 182,780 decreases the expression of estrogen receptor-alpha but has no effect on estrogen receptorbeta and androgen receptor in rat efferent ductules. Reprod Biol Endocrinol 2003;1:75.
  • 32. Cavaco JE, Laurentino SS, Barros A, et al. Estrogen receptors alpha and beta in human testis: both isoforms are expressed. Syst Biol Reprod Med 2009;55:137-44.
  • 33. Paech K, Webb P, Kuiper GG, et al. Differential ligand activation of estrogen receptors ERalpha and ERbeta at AP1 sites. Science 1997;277:1508-10.
  • 34. Pilsworth LM, Hinton BT, Setchell BP. Effects of obstruction of the flow of seminiferous tubule fluid on the germinal epithelium in the rat. J Reprod Fertil 1981;63:347-53.
  • 35. Sar M, Welsch F. Oestrogen receptor alpha and beta in rat prostate and epididymis. Andrologia 2000;32:295- 301.
  • 36. Li H, Papadopoulos V, Vidic B, et al. Regulation of rat testis gonocyte proliferation by platelet-derived growth factor and estradiol: identification of signaling mechanisms involved. Endocrinology 1997;138:1289- 98.
  • 37. Thuillier R, Wang Y, Culty M. Prenatal exposure to estrogenic compounds alters the expression pattern of platelet-derived growth factor receptors alpha and beta in neonatal rat testis: identification of gonocytes as targets of estrogen exposure. Biol Reprod 2003;68:867-80.
  • 38. Wang Y, Thuillier R, Culty M. Prenatal estrogen exposure differentially affects estrogen receptorassociated proteins in rat testis gonocytes. Biol Reprod 2004;71:1652-64.
  • 39. Kula K. Induction of precocious maturation of spermatogenesis in infant rats by human menopausal gonadotropin and inhibition by simultaneous administration of gonadotropins and testosterone. Endocrinology 1988;122:34-9.
  • 40. Shetty G, Krishnamurthy H, Krishnamurthy HN, Bhatnagar AS, Moudgal NR. Effect of long-term treatment with aromatase inhibitor on testicular function of adult male bonnet monkeys (M. radiata). Steroids 1998;63:414-20.
  • 41. Wahlgren A, Svechnikov K, Strand ML, et al. Estrogen receptor beta selective ligand 5alpha-Androstane- 3beta, 17beta-diol stimulates spermatogonial deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis in rat seminiferous epithelium in vitro. Endocrinology 2008;149:2917-22.
Annals of Medical Research-Cover
  • Yayın Aralığı: Aylık
  • Yayıncı: İnönü Üniversitesi Tıp Fakültesi
Sayıdaki Diğer Makaleler

Serum ischemia modified albumin and dynamic thiol/disulfide homeostasis in early- and late-onset preeclampsia

Gültekin ADANAS AYDIN, Gülten ÖZGEN, Özcan EREL, Salim NEŞELİOĞLU

Knowledge, attitude and practice of health education students for stem cell donation and transplantation

Yasemin GÜMÜŞ ŞEKERCİ, Emine KIR BİÇER

Added value of contrast-enhanced and diffusion-weighted MRI data sets for characterization of perianal fistulas; single center experience

Serdar ASLAN

Complications after the percutaneous release of trigger thumb in adults

Bünyamin ARI, Ali CANBAY, Okan ASLANTÜRK, Özgür YILMAZ, Hüseyin KAVAK

A comparison of neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and body fat percentage in hashimoto’s disease induced hypothyroid patients

Mehmet Ali EREN, Emine KORKMAZ, Dursun ÇADIRCI, Ataman GÖNEL

A comparative analysis of the effects of esmolol, lidocaine, nitroglycerin and placebo on hemodynamic response to extubation, and extubation quality and postoperative pain

Bengü Gülhan AYDIN, Gamze KÜÇÜKOSMAN

Does short-term montelukast treatment cause sleep problems or psychiatric problems in children? A preliminary study

Işıl ÇAKMAK KARAER, Yunus Emre DÖNMEZ

Effects of adhesive system, thermal aging and ceramic shade on the final color and bond strength of monolithic lithium disilicate ceramics

Özge PARLAR ÖZ

Color stability comparisons of different type composite resins after curing and when aged in various staining solutions

Başak YAZKAN, Duygu RECEN

Clinicopathological features of papillary thyroid carcinoma: A single-centre experience in Turkey

Fatma ŞENEL