Author:
Gerard A.,Egloff M.,Gerard H.,Harate A. El,Domingo M.,Gueant J. L.,Dang C. D.,Degrelle H.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Human sex steroid-binding protein (hSBP) has been purified from late-pregnancy serum and labelled either by iodination (125I) or by photoaffinity with [3H]Δ6-testosterone. Using a micromanipulator, each labelled protein was separately injected into the lumen of epididymal tubules isolated from the head epididymis of the cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis). Tubules were sampled from 3 to 90 min after the injection and processed for electron microscope autoradiography. Localization of the label occurred over the epididymal epithelium whichever tracer was used. The labelling was not randomly distributed over the different cell types constituting the epithelium, since only the 'principal cells' exhibited a silver grain count significantly greater than the background count. In these cells, labelled protein was found over endocytic organelles (coated structures, endosomes, multivesicular bodies and the trans Golgi network) and nuclei (including the nuclear envelope). Quantitative analysis demonstrated the same pattern of cellular and subcellular distribution for each tracer. Pretreatment with excess unlabelled protein significantly reduced the uptake of radioactivity by the principal cells, demonstrating the specificity of this phenomenon. This is the first study to show direct histological evidence for the internalization of hSBP in the primate epididymis, consistent with earlier immunohistochemical or biochemical localization of this protein. It is concluded that head epididymal cells are able to take up labelled hSBP across their apical membrane. The mechanism of internalization seems to involve endocytosis by the principal cells and leads to labelling of the nuclear compartment. This is strikingly similar to the pattern of uptake of rat androgen-binding protein (rABP) by rat epididymal cells previously demonstrated by our group. To what extent the chemical and structural homology between hSBP and rABP can be held responsible for the common cytophysiological behaviour of these sex steroid-binding proteins remains to be determined.
Subject
Endocrinology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
20 articles.
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