J Reprod Fertil
November 1996
Quantitative changes in testes of roe deer were studied during the annual cycle. Testicular spermatozoa were counted and proportions of different cell types were estimated using DNA flow cytometry. A proliferation-specific antigen of somatic cells was evaluated by an immunoradiometric assay.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChromatin stability and DNA-resistance to acidic denaturation was evaluated by acidic aniline blue and acridine orange staining of cat sperm from different regions of the epididymis. The results were related to conventional sperm parameters. The percentage of aniline blue-stained spermatozoa (persisting histones) decreased significantly from the caput to the cauda region (31.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeasonal cycles of testicular activity occur in many mammals and can include transitions between total arrest and recrudescence of spermatogenesis. We hypothesize that involution and reactivation of testis result from two antagonistic processes, proliferation and programmed cell death (apoptosis), which are activated at different times. To test this hypothesis, quantitative measurements of both proliferation-specific marker and apoptotic produced nucleosomes have been compared with sperm and testosterone production in testes from adult roe deer during breeding and non-breeding seasons (May to September).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFApoptosis (programmed cell death) could contribute to fluctuations in sperm production and involution of testis in dependence on seasonal, genetic, environmental or individual factors. Investigations of such factors require a reliable quantitative examination of apoptotic processes. Therefore, a standardized procedure was developed for quantification of apoptosis in samples of testicular parenchyma in bull.
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