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Transillumination-Assisted Dissection of Specific Stages of the Mouse Seminiferous Epithelial Cycle for Downstream Immunostaining Analyses




TekijätMäkelä Juho-Antti, Cisneros-Montalvo Sheyla, Lehtiniemi Tiina, Olotu Opeyemi, La Hue M, Toppari Jorma, Hobbs Robin M, Parvinen Martti, Kotaja Noora

KustantajaJOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS

Julkaisuvuosi2020

JournalJournal of Visualized Experiments

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiJOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS

Lehden akronyymiJOVE-J VIS EXP

Artikkelin numeroARTN e61800

Numero164

Sivujen määrä18

ISSN1940-087X

eISSN1940-087X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3791/61800

Rinnakkaistallenteen osoitehttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/51141759


Tiivistelmä
Spermatogenesis is a unique differentiation process that ultimately gives rise to one of the most distinct cell types of the body, the sperm. Differentiation of germ cells takes place in the cytoplasmic pockets of somatic Sertoli cells that host 4 to 5 generations of germ cells simultaneously and coordinate and synchronize their development. Therefore, the composition of germ cell types within a cross-section is constant, and these cell associations are also known as stages (I-XII) of the seminiferous epithelial cycle. Importantly, stages can also be identified from intact seminiferous tubules based on their differential light absorption/scatter characteristics revealed by transillumination, and the fact that the stages follow each other along the tubule in a numerical order. This article describes a transillumination-assisted microdissection method for the isolation of seminiferous tubule segments representing specific stages of mouse seminiferous epithelial cycle. The light absorption pattern of seminiferous tubules is first inspected under a dissection microscope, and then tubule segments representing specific stages are cut and used for downstream applications. Here we describe immunostaining protocols for stage-specific squash preparations and for intact tubule segments. This method allows a researcher to focus on biological events taking place at specific phases of spermatogenesis, thus providing a unique tool for developmental, toxicological, and cytological studies of spermatogenesis and underlying molecular mechanisms.

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