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First published online May 15, 2009
Journal of Experimental Biology 212, 1753-1761 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
doi: 10.1242/jeb.027284
Review Article |
Regulation of luminal acidification in the male reproductive tract via cell–cell crosstalk
Center for Systems Biology, Program in Membrane Biology, Nephrology Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114, USA and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: sbreton{at}partners.org)
Accepted 6 January 2009
| Summary |
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|
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Key words: H+-ATPase, pseudostratified epithelia, basal cells, clear cells
| Introduction |
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|
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The epididymal epithelium is composed of four distinct cell types:
principal, narrow, clear and basal cells. Principal and basal cells are
present along the entire length of the epididymal tubule. Narrow cells are
relatively low in number and are located exclusively in the initial segments.
Clear cells are present in the caput, corpus and cauda epididymidis, as well
as in the proximal vas deferens, and are absent from the initial segments
(Fig. 1). Different sets of
transporters, expressed in specific cell types in different segments of the
epididymal tubule, participate in the progressive decrease in bicarbonate
concentration and pH that occurs as the fluid flows through the lumen of the
epididymis (reviewed by Da Silva et al.,
2007b
; Pastor-Soler et al.,
2005
). Significant bicarbonate reabsorption occurs in the initial
segments and caput of the epididymis
(Levine and Kelly, 1978
;
Levine and Marsh, 1971
)
via the sodium–hydrogen exchangers NHE2 and NHE3
(Bagnis et al., 2001
;
Cheng Chew et al., 2000
)
located in the apical membrane of principal cells, and the basolateral anion
exchanger AE2 (Jensen et al.,
1999b
) and sodium–bicarbonate co-transporter NBC-e1 (also
known as SLC4A4) (Jensen et al.,
1999a
). Clear cells, which express high levels of the vacuolar
proton pumping ATPase, V-ATPase, are involved in luminal acidification in the
distal epididymis (Breton et al.,
1996
; Brown et al.,
1992
; Herak-Kramberger et al.,
2001
; Pietrement et al.,
2006
). This review will focus on selected aspects of the
regulation of V-ATPase-dependent proton secretion by these cells.
|
| Clear cells express the V-ATPase in their apical membrane |
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|
|
|---|
Several subunits of the V-ATPase are encoded by more than one gene
(reviewed by Beyenbach and Wieczorek,
2006
; Forgac,
2007
; Wagner et al.,
2004
). In mammals, the a subunit has four isoforms, subunits B, H
and d have two isoforms, and subunits C and G have three isoforms. In
addition, one E isoform, originally designated as ATP6E1, is expressed
exclusively in the testis whereas its homolog, originally designated as
ATP6E2, is expressed ubiquitously
(Imai-Senga et al., 2002
;
Sun-Wada et al., 2002
). For
simplicity, the ubiquitously expressed E isoform will be referred to as
subunit E throughout this review. Differential expression of a particular set
of isoforms in different cell types controls the sub-cellular localization of
the V-ATPase holo-enzyme (Hurtado-Lorenzo
et al., 2006
; Kawasaki-Nishi
et al., 2001a
; Kawasaki-Nishi
et al., 2001b
; Pietrement et
al., 2006
; Sun-Wada et al.,
2003
; Sun-Wada et al.,
2004
; Toyomura et al.,
2003
). In the epididymis, subunits A, B1, B2, C1, C2, G1, G3, E,
a1, a4, d1 and d2 are all enriched in the apical domain of narrow and clear
cells (Da Silva et al., 2007a
;
Paunescu et al., 2004
;
Pietrement et al., 2006
). In
addition, subunits A and a2 were detected in intracellular structures closely
associated with the trans-Golgi network of all epithelial cells
(Pietrement et al., 2006
).
Surprisingly, subunit d1 was observed in the apical membrane of principal
cells in the apparent absence of other V-ATPase subunits, indicating a
potential role for this subunit that might be distinct from its
V-ATPase-related function (Pietrement et
al., 2006
).
| V-ATPase isoform compensatory function |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
| Regulation of V-ATPase-dependent proton secretion via recycling mechanisms |
|---|
|
|
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|
Our laboratory has shown that the accumulation of V-ATPase in the apical
membrane of clear cells is regulated by V-ATPase recycling between sub-apical
vesicles and the apical plasma membrane, a process that is accompanied by
extensive elongation of microvilli and increased net proton secretion
(Beaulieu et al., 2005
;
Breton et al., 2000a
;
Pastor-Soler et al., 2003
;
Pastor-Soler et al., 2008
;
Shum et al., 2008
). Cleavage
of the SNARE protein, cellubrevin, inhibits V-ATPase-dependent proton
secretion in isolated vas deferens, as well as in renal intercalated cells
(Breton et al., 2000a
;
Rothenberger et al., 2007
).
The actin cytoskeleton also plays a key role in the regulation of V-ATPase
recycling in clear cells (Beaulieu et al.,
2005
). Subunits B1, B2 and C of the V-ATPase interact directly
with actin (Chen et al., 2004
;
Holliday et al., 2000
;
Vitavska et al., 2003
). In
addition, B1 can interact indirectly with the actin cytoskeleton via
its association with NHERF1 (Fig.
4), a PDZ protein that contains a merlin-ezrin-radixin-moesin
(MERM) actin-binding domain (Breton et
al., 2000b
). We have shown that clear cells express very high
levels of the actin-capping and -severing protein, gelsolin
(Beaulieu et al., 2005
).
Inhibition of actin polymerization using a permeant peptide that prevents
uncapping of gelsolin from the barbed end of actin filaments, induced a marked
accumulation of the V-ATPase in clear cell microvilli. These results indicate
that gelsolin-dependent actin depolymerization in clear cells favors either
the inhibition of V-ATPase endocytosis or stimulation of exocytosis, leading
to the accumulation of V-ATPase in the plasma membrane
(Beaulieu et al., 2005
).
| Non-hormonal regulation of V-ATPase recycling (crosstalk between principal cells and clear cells) |
|---|
|
|
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|
| Hormonal regulation of V-ATPase recycling (crosstalk between basal cells and clear cells) |
|---|
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|
|---|
All components of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) are present in the
lumen of the epididymis, and play a key role in male fertility
(Esther et al., 1996
;
Hagaman et al., 1998
;
Krege et al., 1995
;
Leung and Sernia, 2003
;
Ramaraj et al., 1998
;
Saez et al., 2004
;
Speth et al., 1999
;
Wong and Uchendu, 1990
). High
concentrations of angiotensin I (ANGI) and ANGII have been detected in the
lumen of the epididymis (Wong and Uchendu,
1990
). Principal cells produce ANGI, which is then secreted into
the lumen (Wong and Uchendu,
1990
). ANGI is converted to ANGII by the angiotensin I converting
enzyme (ACE). Importantly, ACE KO male mice are infertile
(Esther et al., 1996
;
Krege et al., 1995
). ACE
exists in two forms, the testicular form of ACE (tACE) also known as germinal
ACE, which is expressed exclusively in spermatozoa
(Langford et al., 1993
;
Sibony et al., 1994
), and the
somatic form of ACE (sACE) (Corvol et al.,
1995
). The reduction of male fertility in ACE KO mice is due to
the absence of tACE and not sACE, as their fertility is restored after
re-insertion of the tACE gene (Hagaman et
al., 1998
). ACE KO males are infertile because of the poor quality
of their spermatozoa, which are normal in number but are unable to move up the
female reproductive tract and fertilize an egg
(Esther et al., 1996
;
Hagaman et al., 1998
;
Krege et al., 1995
). Thus, a
defect in sperm function rather than production is the leading cause of
infertility in these mice. tACE is attached to the membrane of immature
spermatozoa and it is released into the luminal fluid as sperm transit through
the proximal regions of the epididymis
(Gatti et al., 1999
;
Metayer et al., 2002
;
Thimon et al., 2005
). It was
postulated that luminal tACE might play a role in the regulation of the
epididymal epithelium (Thimon et al.,
2005
). Absence of tACE might, therefore, impair the function of
the epididymis and ultimately the maturation of spermatozoa as they transit
through this organ. To test this hypothesis, we examined the role of ANGII,
the product of ACE, on the acidification capacity of the epididymis.
|
|
|
|
In the epididymal lumen, a significant amount of ANGII might originate from
the enzymatic activity of tACE, which would act on secreted ANGI. Thus,
shedding of tACE from the sperm membrane during their transit through the
epididymis might increase the availability of ANGII near the apical surface of
the epithelium and provide a means by which spermatozoa modulate surrounding
epithelial cells. Consequently, decreased levels of ANGII in the epididymal
lumen of ACE KO male mice might impair the acidifying capacity of the
epididymis with detrimental consequences on sperm quality. The importance of
luminal acidification in the establishment of male fertility was recently
illustrated by the fact that FOXI1 KO male mice, which have abnormally
elevated epididymal luminal pH, are infertile as a result of the inability of
their sperm to fertilize an egg (Blomqvist
et al., 2006
). Because angiotensinogen KO male mice are fertile
(Hagaman et al., 1998
),
further studies will be required to determine whether the concentration of
ANGII is reduced in the epididymal lumen of ACE KO mice, and whether these
mice have impaired luminal acidification.
| Conclusions |
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|
|
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| Footnotes |
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