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Departments of 1 Cell Biology and Neuroscience, 2 Microbiology and Immunology, and 3 Pharmacology, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Columbia, South Carolina 29208
Mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance
regulator (CFTR) gene have been associated with a number of male reproductive problems, including testis abnormalities and a reduction in germ cell quality and number. To establish at least one site of
functional CFTR expression in the testis, we subjected cultured Sertoli
cells to analysis of message, protein, and channel activity for CFTR.
With reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, we obtained
evidence for the presence of CFTR RNA when CFTR primers were used with
RNA from cultured Sertoli cells. Western analysis performed with both
anti-R and anti-C domain CFTR antibodies revealed immunoreactive
material in extracts from primary Sertoli cell cultures that seemed
consistent with CFTR previously identified in other cells and tissues.
This led us to perform more detailed studies using the whole cell
arrangement of the patch-clamp technique. Application of the
membrane-soluble cAMP analog, 8-chlorophenylthio-cAMP, resulted in the
activation of a Cl
current
that displayed a permeability sequence of
Br
> I
Cl
and was blocked by
diphenylamine-2-carboxylate and glibenclamide. In addition, a 13-pS
conductance Cl
channel was
measured in excised membrane patches exposed to the catalytic subunit
of protein kinase A. When taken together, our findings of evidence of
CFTR message, immunoreactive material that appeared consistent with
CFTR, and Cl
channels with
properties similar to those reported for CFTR provide strong evidence
that Sertoli cells express a functional CFTR-like protein. The presence
of CFTR in these cells may be needed to maintain the specific
nutritional and fluid balance in the seminiferous tubule that is vital
for normal spermatogenesis.
testis; chloride; epithelial cells; fluid balance
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