The localization of androgen-binding protein (ABP) in the reproductive tract of young adult male rats was studied with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique using frozen sections and light microscop Show more
The localization of androgen-binding protein (ABP) in the reproductive tract of young adult male rats was studied with the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique using frozen sections and light microscopy. Within the seminiferous tubules, a positive reaction was noted in the apical portion of the epithelium, apparently in spermatids and/or Sertoli cells. ABP was localized in granules in the apical cytoplasm of the principal epithelial cells of the proximal part of the caput epididymis and in the epithelial cells of the ductuli efferentes. The cells in the distal part of the caput as well as the corpus and cauda of the epididymis did not contain ABP. Numerous coated vesicles and multivesicular bodies were present in the supranuclear cytoplasm of the epididymal epithelium where ABP was taken up. The results indicate that ABP is taken up from the lumen by epithelial cells of the ductuli efferentes and proximal part of the caput epididymis. Show less
Protein carboxyl-methylase (PCM), the enzyme that transfers methyl groups from S-adenosyl-methionine to free carboxyl groups on proteins, is highly localized in testes. The cellular distribution of PC Show more
Protein carboxyl-methylase (PCM), the enzyme that transfers methyl groups from S-adenosyl-methionine to free carboxyl groups on proteins, is highly localized in testes. The cellular distribution of PCM and its substrates, the methyl acceptor proteins, was investigated. Separation of testicular cells on an albumin gravity gradient revealed the preferential localization of both enzyme and substrates in spermatids. In young rats, PCM activity increases with age coincidently with germ cell maturation. Rats which are heterozygous for the Hre gene (Hre/+) are infertile as a result of germ cell depletion. In these animals, testicular PCM specific activity and total activity were, respectively, 4--6 and 40--50 times lower than in normal testes. Enzyme activity in testes from animals with x-ray-induced germ cell depletion was also very low. These observations suggest that PCM is located in germ cells. Show less