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Endocrinology, Vol 116, 1983-1996, Copyright © 1985 by Endocrine Society
ARTICLES |
AK Christensen, TE Komorowski, B Wilson, SF Ma and RW Stevens 3d
The distribution of serum albumin is of interest in the rat testis because this protein is the principal carrier for testosterone in the plasma and interstitial fluid of this species. We have localized extravascular serum albumin in the rat testis at the electron microscope level, using gold particle immunocytochemistry on ultrathin frozen sections of tissue fixed lightly by perfusion. The same localization was obtained with three different antisera. Preabsorption and normal rabbit serum controls were negative, and Western blots of testis extracts showed major activity only at the molecular weight of albumin. Serum albumin occurred in substantial concentration throughout extracellular space in the interstitial tissue, as well as in the space between the boundary layer and the base of the seminiferous epithelium. Immunoreactivity extended between Sertoli cells, as well as around spermatogonia and early primary spermatocytes (to stage 11), but did not traverse the Sertoli-Sertoli junctions that comprise the blood- testis barrier. Macrophages in the interstitial tissue showed some endocytic activity. If perfusion fixation was carried out in a manner that flushed most of the albumin from the interstitial space, then a layer of albumin remained on the surface of Leydig cells and many macrophages but was minimal or absent on the surface of other cell types that are normally in contact with albumin, such as Sertoli cells, spermatogonia, myoid cells, lymphatic endothelium, fibroblasts, or cells of blood vessels.
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