4.5 Article

Sodium-inorganic phosphate cotransporter NaPi-IIb in the epididymis and its potential role in male fertility studied in a transgenic mouse model

Journal

BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION
Volume 69, Issue 4, Pages 1135-1141

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1095/biolreprod.103.018028

Keywords

epididymis; gamete biology; male reproductive tract; sperm maturation; sperm motility and transport

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Analysis by cDNA microarrays showed that in the murine epididymis, NaPi-IIb was the predominantly expressed epithelial isoform of the sodium-inorganic phosphate cotransporter and was markedly overexpressed in the proximal region in the infertile knockout (KO) compared to the fertile heterozygous (HET) c-ros transgenic mouse. The apparent up-regulation in the KO mouse confirmed by Northern and Western blot analyses could be explained by the absence of NaPi-IIb from the initial segment of the HET epididymis, as revealed by immunohistochemistry, and its presence on the epithelial brush border throughout the proximal epididymis of KO mice, where differentiation of the initial segment fails to occur. Both NaPi-IIb mRNA and protein were scarce or absent from the cauda epididymidis of both genotypes. A high content of inorganic phosphate was measured enzymatically in the HET cauda luminal fluid, with a 27% decrease in the KO mice. This decrease, presumably from a greater reabsorption of inorganic phosphate, particularly in the initial part of the KO epididymis, may disturb the normal process of sperm maturation in these infertile males. By contrast, no apparent consequences were observed for the transport of Na+ and Ca2+, the concentrations of which (similar to26 mM and similar to30 muM, respectively) were measured by microelectrodes to be identical in the caudal fluid from both genotypes.

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