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1 August 2001 Aquaporin 9 Expression along the Male Reproductive Tract
Nuria Pastor-Soler, Corinne Bagnis, Ivan Sabolic, Robert Tyszkowski, Mary McKee, Alfred Van Hoek, Sylvie Breton, Dennis Brown
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Abstract

Fluid movement across epithelia lining portions of the male reproductive tract is important for modulating the luminal environment in which sperm mature and reside, and for increasing sperm concentration. Some regions of the male reproductive tract express aquaporin (AQP) 1 and/or AQP2, but these transmembrane water channels are not detectable in the epididymis. Therefore, we used a specific antibody to map the cellular distribution of another AQP, AQP9 (which is permeable to water and to some solutes), in the male reproductive tract. AQP9 is enriched on the apical (but not basolateral) membrane of nonciliated cells in the efferent duct and principal cells of the epididymis (rat and human) and vas deferens, where it could play a role in fluid reabsorption. Western blotting revealed a strong 30-kDa band in brush-border membrane vesicles isolated from the epididymis. AQP9 is also expressed in epithelial cells of the prostate and coagulating gland where fluid transport across the epithelium is important for secretory activity. However, it was undetectable in the seminal vesicle, suggesting that an alternative fluid transport pathway may be present in this tissue. Intracellular vesicles in epithelial cells along the reproductive tract were generally poorly stained for AQP9. Furthermore, the apical membrane distribution of AQP9 was unaffected by microtubule disruption. These data suggest that AQP9 is a constitutively inserted apical membrane protein and that its cell-surface expression is not acutely regulated by vesicular trafficking. AQP9 was detectable in the epididymis and vas deferens of 1-wk postnatal rats, but its expression was comparable with adult rats only after 3–4 wk. AQP9 could provide a route via which apical fluid and solute transport occurs in several regions of the male reproductive tract. The heterogenous and segment-specific expression of AQP9 and other aquaporins along the male reproductive tract shown in this and in our previous studies suggests that fluid reabsorption and secretion in these tissues could be locally modulated by physiological regulation of AQP expression and/or function.

Nuria Pastor-Soler, Corinne Bagnis, Ivan Sabolic, Robert Tyszkowski, Mary McKee, Alfred Van Hoek, Sylvie Breton, and Dennis Brown "Aquaporin 9 Expression along the Male Reproductive Tract," Biology of Reproduction 65(2), 384-393, (1 August 2001). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod65.2.384
Received: 8 December 2000; Accepted: 1 March 2001; Published: 1 August 2001
KEYWORDS
epididymis
epithelial transport
male reproductive tract
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