Haploid gene expression: temporal onset and storage patterns of 13 novel transcripts during rat and mouse spermiogenesis

TL Penttilä, L Yuan, P Mali, C Hääg… - Biology of …, 1995 - academic.oup.com
TL Penttilä, L Yuan, P Mali, C Hääg, M Parvinen
Biology of reproduction, 1995academic.oup.com
The temporal and spatial expression of thirteen novel spermatid-specific genes
corresponding to cDNA clones isolated from an adult mouse testis librarywas analyzed.
Northern analysis of RNA from seminiferoustubules at defined stages of the rat and mouse
seminiferous epithelial cycle and in situ hybridization of testis sections revealed that these
mRNAs were expressed in a stage-specific manner. The expression of all mRNAs was first
detected in early round spermatids, and it increased to abundance during stages VII-VIII of …
Abstract
The temporal and spatial expression of thirteen novel spermatid-specific genes corresponding to cDNA clones isolated from an adult mouse testis librarywas analyzed. Northern analysis of RNA from seminiferoustubules at defined stages of the rat and mouse seminiferous epithelial cycle and in situ hybridization of testis sections revealed that these mRNAs were expressed in a stage-specific manner. The expression of all mRNAs was first detected in early round spermatids, and it increased to abundance during stages VII-VIII of the epithelial cycle. Twelve out of thirteen mRNAs were found not only in round spermatids but also in transcriptionally inactive elongated spermatids, suggesting that they are stored and regulated at the translational level. The variation in the length of the poly(A) tail was detected for four of the transcripts, represented by cDNA clones MTEST70, MTEST627, MTEST641, and MTEST643 at defined stages of the cycle. Similarity in the stage-specific expression pattern displayed by this group of haploid-specific genes strongly suggests the presence of common regulatory mechanisms that act during spermiogenesis, and these genes also provide a means for further studies of these mechanisms.
Oxford University Press