4.6 Article

Cell-Cell Interaction-Mediated Signaling in the Testis Induces Reproductive Dysfunction-Lesson from the Toxicant/Pharmaceutical Models

Journal

CELLS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11040591

Keywords

testis; toxicants; cadmium; PFOS; adjudin; cell-cell interactions; signaling proteins

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2021YFC2700200]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81871202]
  3. China Shenzhen Science Technology and Innovative Commission (SZSTI) [SZSTI-JCYJ20180508152336419]
  4. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [R01 HD056034]

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Emerging evidence suggests that cell-cell interactions, mediated by signaling proteins including FAK, Akt1/2, and Cdc42 GTPase, play a crucial role in supporting spermatogenesis. Manipulation of these signaling proteins can modify the outcome of spermatogenesis, offering potential therapeutic approaches for toxicant-induced male reproductive dysfunction.
Emerging evidence has shown that cell-cell interactions between testicular cells, in particular at the Sertoli cell-cell and Sertoli-germ cell interface, are crucial to support spermatogenesis. The unique ultrastructures that support cell-cell interactions in the testis are the basal ES (ectoplasmic specialization) and the apical ES. The basal ES is found between adjacent Sertoli cells near the basement membrane that also constitute the blood-testis barrier (BTB). The apical ES is restrictively expressed at the Sertoli-spermatid contact site in the apical (adluminal) compartment of the seminiferous epithelium. These ultrastructures are present in both rodent and human testes, but the majority of studies found in the literature were done in rodent testes. As such, our discussion herein, unless otherwise specified, is focused on studies in testes of adult rats. Studies have shown that the testicular cell-cell interactions crucial to support spermatogenesis are mediated through distinctive signaling proteins and pathways, most notably involving FAK, Akt1/2 and Cdc42 GTPase. Thus, manipulation of some of these signaling proteins, such as FAK, through the use of phosphomimetic mutants for overexpression in Sertoli cell epithelium in vitro or in the testis in vivo, making FAK either constitutively active or inactive, we can modify the outcome of spermatogenesis. For instance, using the toxicant-induced Sertoli cell or testis injury in rats as study models, we can either block or rescue toxicant-induced infertility through overexpression of p-FAK-Y397 or p-FAK-Y407 (and their mutants), including the use of specific activator(s) of the involved signaling proteins against pAkt1/2. These findings thus illustrate that a potential therapeutic approach can be developed to manage toxicant-induced male reproductive dysfunction. In this review, we critically evaluate these recent findings, highlighting the direction for future investigations by bringing the laboratory-based research through a translation path to clinical investigations.

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