[HTML][HTML] Phenotypic plasticity of mouse spermatogonial stem cells

H Morimoto, M Kanatsu-Shinohara, S Takashima… - PloS one, 2009 - journals.plos.org
H Morimoto, M Kanatsu-Shinohara, S Takashima, S Chuma, N Nakatsuji, M Takehashi…
PloS one, 2009journals.plos.org
Background Spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) continuously undergo self-renewal division
to support spermatogenesis. SSCs are thought to have a fixed phenotype, and development
of a germ cell transplantation technique facilitated their characterization and prospective
isolation in a deterministic manner; however, our in vitro SSC culture experiments indicated
heterogeneity of cultured cells and suggested that they might not follow deterministic fate
commitment in vitro. Methodology and Principal Findings In this study, we report phenotypic …
Background
Spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) continuously undergo self-renewal division to support spermatogenesis. SSCs are thought to have a fixed phenotype, and development of a germ cell transplantation technique facilitated their characterization and prospective isolation in a deterministic manner; however, our in vitro SSC culture experiments indicated heterogeneity of cultured cells and suggested that they might not follow deterministic fate commitment in vitro.
Methodology and Principal Findings
In this study, we report phenotypic plasticity of SSCs. Although c-kit tyrosine kinase receptor (Kit) is not expressed in SSCs in vivo, it was upregulated when SSCs were cultured on laminin in vitro. Both Kit and Kit+ cells in culture showed comparable levels of SSC activity after germ cell transplantation. Unlike differentiating spermatogonia that depend on Kit for survival and proliferation, Kit expressed on SSCs did not play any role in SSC self-renewal. Moreover, Kit expression on SSCs changed dynamically once proliferation began after germ cell transplantation in vivo.
Conclusions/Significance
These results indicate that SSCs can change their phenotype according to their microenvironment and stochastically express Kit. Our results also suggest that activated and non-activated SSCs show distinct phenotypes.
PLOS