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The effects of aging on the seminiferous epithelium and the blood-testis barrier of the Brown Norway rat.

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TLDR
During aging, there is a breakdown of the blood-testis barrier, and there are striking changes in the appearance of Sertoli cells, suggesting a possible intrinsic limitation that prevents stem cells from renewing themselves, whether because of a degeneration of immunological origin orBecause of a lack of SERToli cell support.
Abstract
Steroidogenesis and spermatogenesis decrease in aging Brown Norway rats. We therefore hypothesized that there must be accompanying morphological changes taking place in the seminiferous tubules of the aging testis. The testes of Brown Norway rats ranging in age from 3 to 24 months were prepared for light and electron microscopy. To assess the integrity of the blood-testis barrier with age, a lanthanum nitrate study was done. The normal seminiferous tubules present in rats at 3 and 12 months of age were largely replaced at 24 months by fully regressed tubules that were virtually devoid of germ cells and contained large intercellular spaces. An electron-microscopic study of these regressed tubules showed a complete loss of cyclical variations of the organelles of the Sertoli cells. The nucleus was more irregularly shaped and was present at various levels in the epithelium. The endoplasmic reticulum was a loose, vesiculated network that was unlike the elaborate, tubular, anastomotic network noted in young animals. The lysosomes were large, oddly-shaped, and contained lipidic inclusions, in contrast to the distinct membrane-bound lysosomes and dense core bodies found in the young animals. Adjacent Sertoli cell processes encompassed large, empty intercellular spaces, possibly occupied previously by germ cells. The typical Sertoli-Sertoli junctions of the blood-testis barrier in the young animal were rarely seen at 24 months and were replaced by focal contact points, usually between three Sertoli cell processes. In the aged animals, lanthanum nitrate permeated the basal and adluminal compartments, extending between Sertoli cell processes and entering the intercellular spaces and lumen. In summary, during aging, there is a breakdown of the blood-testis barrier, and there are striking changes in the appearance of Sertoli cells. These results suggest a possible intrinsic limitation that prevents stem cells from renewing themselves, whether because of a degeneration of immunological origin or because of a lack of Sertoli cell support.

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Citations
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Manganese Dosimetry: Species Differences and Implications for Neurotoxicity

TL;DR: A review on the essentiality and toxicity of manganese and its transport across the blood-brain barrier, and its distribution within the central nervous system (CNS) is presented in this article.
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Sertoli Cell Tight Junction Dynamics: Their Regulation During Spermatogenesis

TL;DR: This minireview summarizes some of the recent advances in the study of TJ dynamics in the testis and reviews several models that can be used to study TJ dynamics and highlights specific areas for future research toward understanding the precise physiological relationship between junction dynamics and spermatogenesis.
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Knockout of the transcription factor Nrf2 disrupts spermatogenesis in an age-dependent manner

TL;DR: Evidence that oxidative stress has deleterious effects on the testis and epididymis is provided and a critical role for the transcription factor NRF2 is demonstrated in preventing oxidative disruption of spermatogenesis is demonstrated.
Book ChapterDOI

Blood-testis barrier, junctional and transport proteins and spermatogenesis.

TL;DR: It is shown that testis blood flow measured by indicator dilution with rubidium gave much lower values that with iodoantipyrine, suggesting that rubidium was also excluded to some extent from parts of the testis, as it was from the brain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution of Immune Cells in the Epididymis of the Aging Brown Norway Rat Is Segment-Specific and Related to the Luminal Content

TL;DR: It is postulated that accumulation of damaged epithelial cells and antigens of germ cell origin, leaking through a dysfunctional blood-epididymis barrier, may contribute to the active recruitment of immune cells with age.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Definition of the Stages of the Cycle of the Seminiferous Epithelium in the Rat

TL;DR: In the present work, the cellular associations were defined by the stage of development of the spermatids, which themselves were characterized by their staining reaction to the “periodic acid-Schiff” technique (hereafter referred to as PAFSA).
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of the seminiferous epithelium

TL;DR: The development of male germ cells in the seminiferous tubules of the testis involves three main phases: spermatogonial multiplication, meiosis, and spermiogenesis, which follows each other in regular fashion, giving rise to the wave of the seminifierous epithelium in most mammals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leydig Cell Numbers, Daily Sperm Production, and Serum Gonadotropin Levels in Aging Men

TL;DR: The highest FSH levels were found in men with the lowest rates of sperm production, and FSH and daily sperm production were inversely correlated even after the effects of age were removed, showing that the response of the human testis to aging is variable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical review 24: Androgens in the aging male.

TL;DR: Clinical signs of old age in men is accompanied by clinical signs, such as a decrease in muscle and bone mass, decrease in sexual hair growth, and decreased libido and sexual activity, suggesting decreased virility, supported by histological evidence for a decreased Leydig mass and function.
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