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Reproduction (2007) 133 563-574
DOI: 10.1530/REP-06-0271
Copyright © 2007 Society for Reproduction and Fertility
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RESEARCH

Vezatin, a ubiquitous protein of adherens cell–cell junctions, is exclusively expressed in germ cells in mouse testis

Vincent Hyenne1, Juergen C Harf2, Martin Latz2, Bernard Maro1,3, Uwe Wolfrum2 and Marie-Christine Simmler1

1 Biologie Cellulaire du Développement, UMR 7622, CNRS, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, 9 Quai St Bernard, 75252 Paris cedex 05, France, 2 Institut für Zoologie, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Müllerweg 6, 55099 Mainz, Germany and 3 Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv 69978, Israel

Correspondence should be addressed to M-C Simmler and B Maro; Email: msimmler{at}ccr.jussieu.fr; maro{at}ccr.jussieu.fr

In the male reproductive organs of mammals, the formation of spermatozoa takes place during two successive phases: differentiation (in the testis) and maturation (in the epididymis). The first phase, spermiogenesis, relies on a unique adherens junction, the apical ectoplasmic specialization linking the epithelial Sertoli cells to immature differentiating spermatids. Vezatin is a transmembrane protein associated with adherens junctions and the actin cytoskeleton in most epithelial cells. We report here the expression profile of vezatin during spermatogenesis. Vezatin is exclusively expressed in haploid germ cells. Immunocytochemical and ultrastructural analyses showed that vezatin intimately coincides, temporally and spatially, with acrosome formation. While vezatin is a transmembrane protein associated with adherens junctions in many epithelial cells, it is not seen at the ectoplasmic specializations, neither at the basal nor at the apical sites, in the seminiferous epithelium. In particular, vezatin does not colocalize with espin and myosin VIIa, two molecular markers of the ectoplasmic specialization. In differentiating spermatids, ultrastructural data indicate that vezatin localizes in the acrosome. In epididymal sperm, vezatin localizes also to the outer acrosomal membrane. Considering its developmental and molecular characteristics, vezatin may be involved in the assembly/stability of this spermatic membrane.







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