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
Regulation of luminal acidification in the male reproductive tract via cell–cell crosstalk
Winnie W. C. Shum,
Nicolas Da Silva,
Dennis Brown and
Sylvie Breton*
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
In the epididymis, spermatozoa acquire their ability to become
motile and
to fertilize an egg. A luminal acidic pH and a low
bicarbonate concentration
help keep spermatozoa in a quiescent
state during their maturation and storage
in this organ. Net
proton secretion is crucial to maintain the acidity of the
luminal
fluid in the epididymis. A sub-population of epithelial cells,
the
clear cells, express high levels of the proton-pumping V-ATPase
in their
apical membrane and are important contributors to luminal
acidification. This
review describes selected aspects of V-ATPase
regulation in clear cells. The
assembly of a particular set
of V-ATPase subunit isoforms governs the
targeting of the pump
to the apical plasma membrane. Regulation of
V-ATPase-dependent
proton secretion occurs via recycling mechanisms. The
bicarbonate-activated
adenylyl cyclase is involved in the non-hormonal
regulation
of V-ATPase recycling, following activation of bicarbonate
secretion
by principal cells. The V-ATPase is also regulated in a paracrine
manner
by luminal angiotensin II by activation of the angiotensin II
type 2
receptor (AGTR2), which is located in basal cells. Basal
cells have the
remarkable property of extending long and slender
cytoplasmic projections that
cross the tight junction barrier
to monitor the luminal environment. Clear
cells are activated
by a nitric oxide signal that originates from basal cells.
Thus,
a complex interplay between the different cell types present
in the
epithelium leads to activation of the luminal acidifying
capacity of the
epididymis, a process that is crucial for sperm
maturation and storage.
Key words: H+-ATPase, pseudostratified epithelia, basal cells, clear cells

Introduction
The establishment of male fertility is a complex process that
requires
concerted interactions between different tissues of
the male reproductive
tract and accessory glands, and between
the different cell types that compose
these organs. These include
the production of a large number of spermatozoa by
the testis,
followed by several maturation steps that occur along the male
excurrent
duct. Morphologically and functionally distinct tissues are
present
in the male reproductive tract and include the testis,
efferent ducts,
epididymis and vas deferens. Spermatozoa produced
by the testis are immature,
and they cannot find and fertilize
an egg. They acquire their motility and
fertilizing capacity
during their passage through the lumen of the epididymis,
which
is composed of one single convoluted tubule
(Hinton and Palladino,
1995

;
Jones and Murdoch, 1996

;
Orgebin-Crist, 2003

;
Robaire
and Viger, 1995

;
Yeung et al., 1993

).
Epithelial cells lining
the epididymal duct play a vital role in establishing
the optimal
environment for the maturation and storage of spermatozoa
(Da
Silva et al., 2007b

;
Hinton and Palladino, 1995

;
Pastor-Soler
et al., 2005

;
Robaire and Viger, 1995

;
Wong et al., 2002

). The
luminal
fluid in which spermatozoa reside undergoes significant modifications
as
it moves from the proximal to the distal regions of the epididymis.
For
example, the establishment of a low pH and a low bicarbonate
concentration in
the epididymal lumen (Levine and Kelly,
1978

;
Levine and Marsh,
1971

) is crucial for the maintenance of spermatozoa
in a quiescent
state during their maturation and storage
(Acott
and Carr, 1984

;
Carr et al., 1985

). By
preventing the activation
of the calcium channel, CatSper1 (cation channel,
sperm-associated
1), which is located in the sperm membrane and is involved in
sperm
capacitation, acidic pH contributes to the maintenance of sperm
in a
dormant state (Kirichok et al.,
2006

). Capacitation of
sperm occurs after mixing with the
prostatic and seminal vesicle
fluids and is triggered by an influx of
bicarbonate, which is
abundant in these fluids, followed by activation of a
bicarbonate-sensitive
adenylyl cyclase (sAC) in sperm
(Chen et al., 2000

;
Sinclair
et al., 2000

). The
subsequent elevation of cAMP induces the
phosphorylation of several proteins
by protein kinase A, and
downregulation of the epithelial sodium channel
(EnaC) (Demarco
et al., 2003

;
Hernandez-Gonzalez et al.,
2006

; Visconti et al.,
1999

)
leading to capacitation.
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
V-ATPase is a ubiquitous protein that acidifies intracellular
organelles
and it is also enriched in the plasma membrane of
some specialized proton
transporting cells. These include renal
intercalated cells, osteoclasts,
interdental cells of the inner
ear, epithelial cells of the olfactory mucosa,
and epididymal
narrow and clear cells
(Beyenbach and Wieczorek, 2006

;
Breton
et al., 1996

;
Brown et al., 1992

;
Forgac, 2007

;
Paunescu et
al., 2008

;
Pietrement et al., 2006

;
Stankovic et al., 1997

;
Sun-Wada
et al., 2004

;
Wagner et al., 2004

). The
V-ATPase is composed
of several subunits, which are assembled into two
distinct V
0 and V
1 domains. The structure of this
complex enzyme is described
in detail in other reviews elsewhere in this issue
(Saroussi
and Nelson, 2009

;
Wieczorek et al., 2009

). In
mammals, the V
0 domain contains five transmembrane subunits (a, d,
e, c and
c'') and the V
1 domain contains eight cytosolic
subunits (A
to H) (see also Beyenbach and
Wieczorek, 2006

; Forgac,
2007

;
Wagner et al.,
2004

). Three copies of subunit A alternate with
three copies of
subunit B and form a large complex that is responsible
for ATP binding and
hydrolysis. This hydrolysis drives the rotation
of a central rotor formed by
subunits D, F and d with subsequent
rotations of the c-c'' ring with
respect to the static and larger
subunit a. Two peripheral stalks formed by
two sets of subunits
G and E ensure the stability of subunit a together with
the
A
3-B
3 complex. Proton translocation occurs between
the rotating
c-c'' ring and the static subunit a.
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
Different sub-cellular localization patterns for the a and B
isoforms were
observed in the apical domain of clear cells.
A close co-localization of a4
and B1 with subunit E was detected
in sub-apical vesicles and apical
microvilli in contrast to
a1 and B2, which were detected in sub-apical
vesicles only and
not in microvilli (Figs
2 and
3)
(Paunescu et al., 2004

;
Pietrement
et al., 2006

).
These results indicate that subunits a4 and B1
are the predominant isoforms
responsible for proton secretion
across the apical membrane of clear cells,
whereas a1 and B2
might serve as back-up isoforms in cases of deficient or
absent
a4 and B1. In humans harboring mutations in
ATP6V1B1 and
ATP6V0A4,
the genes that encode the B1 and a4 subunits, respectively,
defective
proton secretion by intercalated cells results in the development
of
systemic acidosis, a disease that is known as distal renal
tubular acidosis
(dRTA) (Karet et al., 1999

;
Stover et al.,
2002

). By
contrast, although humans with B1 mutations develop
deafness, most of those
with a4 mutations have intact hearing,
despite the fact that both B1 and a4
are expressed in the inner
ear (Stover et
al., 2002

). Similarly, although a4 is the predominant
isoform in
the apical membrane of renal proximal tubule cells
(Hurtado-Lorenzo
et al.,
2006

), humans harboring a4 mutations do not develop
proximal
tubular acidosis. These cases further indicate the
possibility that a given
subunit isoform might constitute a
backup for its counterpart. For example,
can another a isoform
replace the mutated a4 in the proximal tubule and inner
ear?
Such isoform replacement occurs in the absence of B1 in B1-knockout
(KO)
mice, where the compensatory insertion of B2 with the plasma
membrane-bound
V-ATPase allows V-ATPase-dependent proton transport
to occur across the
membrane of epididymal clear cells and renal
intercalated cells
(Da Silva et al., 2007a

;
Paunescu et al.,
2007

).
Accordingly, male mice lacking the B1 subunit do not
develop dRTA and are not
infertile (Da Silva et al.,
2007a

).
By contrast, in humans harboring B1 mutations, B2
replacement
does not appear to take place, which results in the development
of
dRTA. Whether or not B2 is able to assemble into the holoenzyme
in the
presence of deficient B1, or whether the mutated B1 subunit
by itself impairs
V-ATPase trafficking, as was shown in cell
cultures
(Yang et al., 2006

), are
questions that will require
further investigation. Future follow-up studies
will also be
necessary to determine whether or not human males with B1 and/or
a4
mutations will develop infertility.

Regulation of V-ATPase-dependent proton secretion via recycling mechanisms
Clear cells significantly increase in number from the proximal
to the
distal regions of the epididymis, and they are most numerous
in the cauda
epididymidis (
Fig. 4). Their
contribution to luminal
acidification is, therefore, higher in the distal
epididymis
than in the proximal epididymis, where bicarbonate reabsorption
by
principal cells occurs. As mentioned above, proton secretion
by clear cells is
achieved by apical V-ATPase, which works in
conjunction with basolateral
bicarbonate transporters (Breton
et al.,
1998

), and cytosolic carbonic anhydrase II
(Breton et
al., 1996

;
Breton et al., 1999

;
Da Silva et al., 2007b

). The
V-ATPase
inhibitors bafilomycin and concanamycin A abolish net proton
secretion,
as measured with an extracellular proton-selective electrode
in
cut-open vas deferens, a segment that also contains V-ATPase-rich
clear cells,
indicating the contribution of V-ATPase to luminal
acidification
(Breton et al., 1998

;
Breton et al., 2000a

;
Breton
et al., 1996

;
Shum et al., 2008

). Although
clear cells express
the basolateral transporters, NBCe-1 and AE2, functional
analysis
showed that proton secretion in these cells is independent of
Cl
–,
but is SITS sensitive, indicating the potential
participation
of NBCe-1 and not AE2 in this process
(Breton et al., 1998

).
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)
Principal cells of the cauda epididymidis and vas deferens secrete
bicarbonate
following basolateral adrenergic and hormonal stimulation
(Carlin
et al., 2003

;
Hagedorn et al., 2007

;
Leung and Wong, 1992

;
Pierucci-Alves
and Schultz,
2008

; Sedlacek et al.,
2001

; Wong, 1988

).
This
process depends on the presence of CFTR
(Wong, 1998

), which
is located
in the apical membrane of principal cells
(Pietrement
et al., 2008

)
(
Fig. 5). Acute bicarbonate
secretion upon stimulation
of the epididymal epithelium was proposed to help
prime spermatozoa
prior to ejaculation
(Carlin et al., 2003

).
However, a sustained
increase in luminal pH and bicarbonate concentration
following
stimulation of bicarbonate secretion might be detrimental to
epididymal
sperm survival. We proposed that clear cells are responsible
for
the re-establishment of the luminal resting acidic pH and
low bicarbonate
concentration that sperm require to remain inactive
during their storage
period (reviewed by Da Silva et al.,
2007b

;
Pastor-Soler et al.,
2005

). To test this hypothesis, we developed
an
in vivo
rat epididymis luminal microperfusion procedure for
the study of luminal
factors in the regulation of the epididymal
epithelium
(
Fig. 6A). We showed that clear
cells respond to
an increase in luminal pH from the resting value of pH 6.6 to
the
alkaline pH of 7.8 by accumulating V-ATPase in their apical
microvilli
(Beaulieu et al., 2005

;
Pastor-Soler et al., 2003

).
A
similar response was elicited when clear cells were luminally
perfused with a
bicarbonate-containing solution, compared with
a phosphate-containing
perfusate at constant pH (Pastor-Soler
et
al., 2003

). We identified the bicarbonate-activated adenylyl
cyclase,
sAC, as the sensor responsible for the response of rat epididymal
clear
cells to variations in bicarbonate concentration
(Pastor-Soler
et al., 2003

).
V-ATPase apical membrane accumulation is induced
by cAMP
(
Fig. 6B,C) and is dependent on
the activity of protein
kinase A
(Pastor-Soler et al., 2008

).
Clear cells are, therefore,
in a position to re-establish luminal low
bicarbonate and pH
conditions following an increase in bicarbonate secretion
by
principal cells. These results indicate a concerted interaction
between
principal cells, whose role would be to temporally prime
spermatozoa during
sexual arousal prior to ejaculation, and
clear cells, which would then
contribute to the re-establishment
of the acidic conditions essential for
keeping sperm in a quiescent
state during their storage period in the
epididymis.

Hormonal regulation of V-ATPase recycling (crosstalk between basal cells and clear cells)
The previous section illustrates how clear cells can respond,
in a
hormone-independent manner, to variations in their extracellular
environment
by the participation of bicarbonate-sensitive sAC.
The following section
describes the paracrine regulation of
clear cells by the hormone angiotensin
II (ANGII).
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.
We showed that
in vivo luminal perfusion of rat epididymis with
ANGII
elicited a marked accumulation of V-ATPase in clear cell microvilli
(Shum
et al., 2008

). This
effect was accompanied by a significant
increase in V-ATPase-dependent proton
secretion in the cut-open
vas deferens. These results were consistent with the
activation
of V-ATPase by ANGII that had been previously reported in renal
intercalated
cells (Pech et al.,
2008

; Rothenberger et al.,
2007

). In addition,
we showed that the nitric oxide-cGMP pathway
was responsible
for V-ATPase activation in clear cells through the
participation
of the ANGII type II receptor (AGTR2)
(Shum et al., 2008

). However,
RT-PCR
analysis of clear cells isolated by fluorescence activated cell
sorting
(FACS) from transgenic mice that express EGFP in clear
cells exclusively
(
Fig. 7A)
(Miller et al., 2005

) did not
detect
AGTR2 mRNA in these cells (
Fig.
7B). In addition, AGTR2 protein
was absent from rat epididymal
clear cells, as demonstrated
by immunofluorescence
(
Fig. 8A',A'',
arrowheads) (Shum et al.,
2008

).
By contrast, a strong labeling for AGTR2 was detected in
basal
cells, which were found unexpectedly to extend narrow body projections
that
reach up toward the luminal border of the epithelium
(
Fig. 8A',A'',
arrows).
Three-dimensional confocal microscopy confirmed that basal cells
express
AGTR2 (
Fig. 8B, arrows)
and that they produce a slender body
extension that infiltrates between other
epithelial cells towards
the lumen. Interestingly, double labeling for
claudin-1, a basal
cell marker (Gregory et
al., 2001

) and ZO1, a tight junction
(TJ) marker, showed that
basal cells preferentially reach and
sometimes cross the TJs at the tripartite
junction between other
epithelial cells
(
Fig. 9, arrows). In addition,
while some basal
cells did not interact with TJs
(
Fig. 10A), others showed
various
degrees of interactions from partial
(
Fig. 10B,C) to complete
(
Fig. 10D,E)
with formation of
a new TJ between themselves and adjacent epithelial
cells. Similar patterns of
interaction between basal cells and
TJs were also seen in other tissues
including the rat trachea
and coagulating gland
(Shum et al., 2008

).
Altogether our results provide evidence that basal cells can
actually reach
the luminal side of an epithelium (Shum et
al.,
2008

). This previously unrecognized property of basal cells
now
places them in a central position to survey the lumen of the
epididymis, a
property that might be present in other biological
systems, including the
upper respiratory tract. In the epididymis,
one function of basal cells would
be to scan the lumen for the
presence of ANGII. Activation of AGTR2 in basal
cells by luminal
ANGII results in the increase of V-ATPase-dependent proton
secretion
in adjacent clear cells by production of nitric oxide in basal
cells,
which diffuses out and activates soluble guanylate cyclase in
clear
cells (Shum et al., 2008

). The
subsequent production of
cGMP leads to the apical accumulation of V-ATPase in
a manner
similar to the effect elicited by cAMP. Our proposed model of
basal–clear
cell crosstalk is illustrated in
Fig. 11. According to this
model,
luminal sampling of ANGII by basal cells followed by activation
of
proton secretion in clear cells would ensure that the luminal
fluid is
maintained at the acidic physiological pH range that
is crucial for sperm
maturation and storage in the epididymis.
A similar crosstalk mechanism has
also been proposed between
basal cells and principal cells,
via
activation of basal cells
by basolateral lysylbradykinin followed by
activation of anion
secretion in principal cells
(Cheung et al., 2005

;
Leung et
al., 2004

).
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
The epididymis is the main site for post-testicular sperm maturation
and
storage and is, therefore, a major player in the establishment
of male
fertility. The generation of an acidic luminal environment
in the epididymis
is essential for keeping sperm in a dormant,
immotile state during their
transit in this organ. A growing
body of evidence indicates that epithelial
cells lining the
epididymal tubule have developed an elaborate network of
cell-cell
and cell-sperm `crosstalk' to regulate transepithelial transport.
A
sub-population of epithelial cells, the clear cells, express
high levels of
V-ATPase in their apical membrane and are important
contributors to luminal
acidification. Targeting of the V-ATPase
to the plasma membrane depends upon
the assembly of a particular
set of V-ATPase subunit isoforms. In addition,
V-ATPase-dependent
proton secretion in clear cells is regulated by recycling
of
the V-ATPase to and from the apical plasma membrane. The luminal
environment
modulates this process, and proton secretion increases following
a
rise in luminal pH or luminal bicarbonate concentration, through
the
activation of sAC, which is enriched in clear cells. Proton
secretion in clear
cells is also modulated in a paracrine manner
via ANGII, which is
locally produced in the luminal fluid. This
triggers a complex communication
network between basal cells,
which have the previously unrecognized ability to
send narrow
body projections across the tight-junction barrier to reach
the
lumen, and clear cells. Activation of AGTR2 by luminal ANGII
induces the
production of nitric oxide in basal cells, which
then diffuses out to trigger
the production of cGMP in clear
cells, followed by apical membrane V-ATPase
accumulation and
subsequent increase in proton secretion. Thus, concerted
interactions
between different cell types take place in the epididymis for
the
fine control of an optimum acidic luminal environment that
is critical for
male fertility.

Footnotes
We would like to thank Eric Hill for his excellent technical
assistance.
This work was supported by National Institutes of
Health
Grants
HD40793, DK38452 and
HD045821. The work performed in
the Microscopy Core
Facility of the Massachusetts General Hospital
Program in Membrane Biology was
supported by Center for the
Study of Inflammatory Bowel
Disease Grant DK43351 and
Boston
Area Diabetes and Endocrinology Research Center
Award DK57521.
Deposited in PMC for
release after 12 months.

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N. Da Silva, T. Pisitkun, C. Belleannee, L. R. Miller, R. Nelson, M. A. Knepper, D. Brown, and S. Breton
Proteomic analysis of V-ATPase-rich cells harvested from the kidney and epididymis by fluorescence-activated cell sorting
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol,
June 1, 2010;
298(6):
C1326 - C1342.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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A. Joseph, R. A. Hess, D. J. Schaeffer, C. Ko, S. Hudgin-Spivey, P. Chambon, and B. D. Shur
Absence of Estrogen Receptor Alpha Leads to Physiological Alterations in the Mouse Epididymis and Consequent Defects in Sperm Function
Biol Reprod,
May 1, 2010;
82(5):
948 - 957.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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C. Belleannee, N. Da Silva, W. W. C. Shum, D. Brown, and S. Breton
Role of purinergic signaling pathways in V-ATPase recruitment to apical membrane of acidifying epididymal clear cells
Am J Physiol Cell Physiol,
April 1, 2010;
298(4):
C817 - C830.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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I-C. Tseng, H. Xu, F.-P. Chou, G. Li, A. P. Vazzano, J. P. Y. Kao, M. D. Johnson, and C.-Y. Lin
Matriptase Activation, an Early Cellular Response to Acidosis
J. Biol. Chem.,
January 29, 2010;
285(5):
3261 - 3270.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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