Rat Prostaglandin D2 Synthetase: Its Tissue Distribution, Changes during Maturation, and Regulation in the Testis and Epididymis1

Claudio Sorrentino(Pharmacology Research Institute), Bruno Silvestrini(Sapienza University of Rome), L. Braghiroli(Pharmacology Research Institute), Sanny S.W. Chung(Population Council), Sabrina Giacomelli(Sapienza University of Rome), Maria-Grazia Leone(Sapienza University of Rome), Yanbo Xie(Pharmacology Research Institute), Yaping Sui(Population Council), Meng‐yun Mo(Pharmacology Research Institute), C. Yan Cheng(Pharmacology Research Institute)
Biology of Reproduction
October 1, 1998
Cited by 50Open Access
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Abstract

The changes in glutathione-independent prostaglandin D 2 synthetase (PGD-S) during maturation in the rat were determined in selected organs by an RIA using PGD-S purified from rat cerebrospinal fluid and a monospecific anti-rat PGD-S polyclonal antibody. In a survey of its tissue distribution in various organ extracts and biological fluids, it was found that the concentration of PGD-S was highest in the epididymis-about 6and 80-fold greater than that in the brain and testis, respectively. During maturation, PGD-S concentration increased steadily in the testis and epididymis; this is in contrast to the pattern of changes in the brain and liver, which showed a general trend of decline. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and Southern blotting were used to demonstrate the presence of PGD-S mRNA transcript in the testis and in Sertoli and germ cells. In the epididymis, the steady-state PGD-S mRNA level was highest in the caput, followed by the cauda and corpus. Orchiectomy induced a drastic reduction of PGD-S concentration in all three epididymal compartments. Administration of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) failed to restore the reduced epididymal PGD-S level except in the caput epididymis, where 4 days after DHT treatment the level of PGD-S was restored to about 50% of the pre-orchiectomized level; this suggests that the epididymal PGD-S level is not entirely regulated by androgen and that another yet to be identified testicular factor(s) is likely to be involved in its regulation. Germ cell-conditioned medium was also shown to stimulate PGD-S expression in the Sertoli cell. These results illustrate that PGD-S is an important molecule in testicular and epididymal function and that it is likely involved in spermatogenesis and sperm maturation.


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