Retinoids and spermatogenesis: Lessons from mutant mice lacking the plasma retinol binding protein

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Abstract

Using Rbp4-null mice as models, we have established for the first time the kinetics of the spermatogenetic alterations during vitamin A deficiency (VAD). Our data demonstrate that the VAD-induced testicular degeneration arises through the normal maturation of germ cells in a contest of spermatogonia differentiation arrest. They indicate that retinoic acid (RA) appears dispensable for the transition of premeiotic to meiotic spermatocytes, meiosis, and spermiogenesis. They confirm that RA plays critical roles in controlling spermatogonia differentiation, spermatid adhesion to Sertoli cells, and spermiation, and suggest that the VAD-induced arrest of spermatogonia differentiation results from simultaneous blocks in RA-dependent events mediated by RA receptor γ (RARγ) in spermatogonia and by RARα in Sertoli cells. They also provide evidence that expression of major RA-metabolizing enzymes is increased in mouse Sertoli cells upon VAD and that vitamin A-deficient A spermatogonia differ from their RA-sufficient counterparts by the expression of the Strα8 gene. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Ghyselinck, N. B., Vernet, N., Dennefeld, C., Giese, N., Nau, H., Chambon, P., … Mark, M. (2006). Retinoids and spermatogenesis: Lessons from mutant mice lacking the plasma retinol binding protein. Developmental Dynamics, 235(6), 1608–1622. https://doi.org/10.1002/dvdy.20795

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