Train A, an RNase A-Like Protein Without RNase Activity, Is Secreted and Reabsorbed by the Same Epididymal Cells under Testicular Control
Most of the proteins secreted in the epididymis are produced by the proximal region, and several of them are secreted in abundance. Many of these major proteins have now been identified, including a new epididymis-specific RNase A-like Train A protein, which has been recently described in several ma...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biology of reproduction 2004-11, Vol.71 (5), p.1677-1687 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Most of the proteins secreted in the epididymis are produced by the proximal region, and several of them are secreted in abundance.
Many of these major proteins have now been identified, including a new epididymis-specific RNase A-like Train A protein, which
has been recently described in several mammals. This protein is expressed and secreted exclusively in the initial part of
the epididymis. RNase A activity was analyzed in the fluids from the testis and from different epididymal regions, but in
no case was the Train A protein found to have RNase A activity. The protein was present only in the luminal fluid of the epididymal
region that secreted it. Using an in vitro/in vivo microperfusion technique and immunogold electron microscopy labeling, we
demonstrated that the epithelium that secreted it specifically reabsorbed the protein that was present in the lumen of the
tubule. Thus, the presence of Train A protein in epididymal fluid was the result of a steady state between secretion and absorption.
The transcription and translation of Train A mRNA were simultaneous and actively regulated by testicular factors. The function
of this protein is unknown, but it does not seem to interact directly with sperm. As for other members of the RNase family
(e.g., angiogenin), its biological activity might be expressed after its cellular reabsorption. This new compound might therefore
participate in an unknown function in the epithelial cells of this first part of the epididymis by an autocrine pathway. |
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ISSN: | 0006-3363 1529-7268 |
DOI: | 10.1095/biolreprod.104.031666 |