The area occupied by Sertoli cell lipid inclusions - electron-lucent lipid vacuoles (LLV) and electron-dense lipid droplets (DLD) - at each stage of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium was measured on electron micrographs in young adults and elderly men, and expressed as the ratio 'area occupied by lipid inclusions/area occupied by the Sertoli cell cytoplasm'. For LLV this ratio increased from stage I to stage III, and decreased from stage IV to stage VI in young adults. These results suggest that the development of LLV is synchronized with the spermatogenic process: the residual bodies released in stages I and II are phagocytized by Sertoli cells and transformed into LLV; the amounts of LLV decrease in the subsequent stages of the cycle and increase again when new residual bodies appear. In elderly men the ratio LLV/Sertoli cell cytoplasm was 1.9-2.9 times higher than in young adults at each stage of the cycle. This increase may be related to the increased germ-cell degeneration observed in ageing testes, DLD were less abundant than LLV and the DLD/Sertoli cell cytoplasm ratio did not undergo cyclic changes in young adults or elderly men.
CITATION STYLE
Paniagua, R., Rodríguez, M. C., Nistal, M., Fraile, B., & Amat, P. (1987). Changes in the lipid inclusion/Sertoli cell cytoplasm area ratio during the cycle of the human seminiferous epithelium. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility, 80(1), 335–341. https://doi.org/10.1530/jrf.0.0800335
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