Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T15:02:16.810Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Review: Spermatogenesis in the bull

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2018

C. Staub*
Affiliation:
UE1297 Physiologie Animale de l’Orfrasière, Institut National pour la Recherche Agronomique, Centre INRA Val de Loire, Nouzilly 37380, France
L. Johnson
Affiliation:
College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843-4458, USA
*

Abstract

Spermatogenesis is a finely regulated process of germ cell multiplication and differentiation leading to the production of spermatozoa in the seminiferous tubules. Spermatogenesis can be divided into three parts: spermatocytogenesis, meiosis and spermiogenesis. During spermatocytogenesis, germ cells engage in a cycle of several mitotic divisions that increases the yield of spermatogenesis and to renew stem cells and produce spermatogonia and primary spermatocytes. Meiosis involves duplication and exchange of genetic material and two cell divisions that reduce the chromosome number and yield four haploid round spermatids. Spermiogenesis involves the differentiation of round spermatids into fully mature spermatozoa released into the lumin of seminiferous tubules. The seminiferous epithelium is composed of several generations of germ cells due to the fact that new generations of sperm cells engage in the spermatogenic process without waiting for the preceding generations to have completed their evolution and to have disappeared as spermatozoa into the lumen of the tubules. In bulls, the duration of the seminiferous epithelium cycle is 13.5 days. The total duration of spermatogenesis is 61 days, that is 4.5 times the duration of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. The spermatogenetic wave is used to describe the spatial arrangement of cell associations along the tubules. Several theories have been described to explain the renewal of spermatogonia. Depending on the model, there are five or six spermatogonial mitoses explaining the renewal of stem cells and the proliferation of spermatogonia. Daily sperm production and germ cell degeneration can be quantified from numbers of germ cells in various steps of development throughout spermatogenesis. Bulls have a lower efficiency of spermatogenesis than most species examined, but higher than that of humans.

Type
Review Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use or in order to create a derivative work.
Copyright
© The Animal Consortium 2018

Implication

This review article focuses on the exocrine function of the testis with particular emphasis on accumulated knowledge in cattle. The information described will be useful for scientists seeking basic knowledge of bull spermatogenesis.

Introduction

The testis is the site of two major functions: an exocrine function and an endocrine function. The exocrine function involves the production of highly differentiated gametes, the spermatozoa, released into the lumen of the seminiferous tubules and then stored in the epididymis. The endocrine function is performed by the Leydig cells, located in the interstitial compartment, outside the tubules, the main role of which is the production of steroids. In this review, we focus on the exocrine function of the testis, termed spermatogenesis, with particular focus on the accumulated knowledge in the bovine species.

Spermatogenesis is a finely regulated process of germ cell multiplication and differentiation leading to the production of male gametes, the spermatozoa released at the apical pole of Sertoli cells, the somatic component of the seminiferous tubules (Figure 1). Spermatogenesis can be divided into three parts: spermatocytogenesis, meiosis and spermiogenesis.

Figure 1 Seminiferous tubules in the bull testis viewed by brightfield microscopy. Seminiferous tubules are composed of myoid cells (MC), Sertoli cells (SC) and germ cells. In this stage V tubule, the germ cells include A spermatogonia (A), pachytene primary spermatocytes (P), secondary spermatocytes (SS), Sa (Sa) and Sd1 (Sd1) spermatids. Bar length equals 10 µm.

During spermatocytogenesis, stem germ cells engage in the spermatogenetic process by performing a first mitotic division that generates spermatogonia. The latter proliferate in turn by performing several successive mitotic divisions which result in the production of preleptotene spermatocytes. The preleptotene spermatocytes cross the blood-testis barrier and engage in meiotic prophase. During the prophase of the first division of meiosis, the germinal cells differentiate successively into different stages (leptotene, zygotene, pachytene, diplotene) before undergoing the two meiotic divisions. The first meiotic division is the reductional division (reduction of chromosome number, separation of homologous chromosomes), while the second meiotic division is the equational division (separation of the daughter chromatids). Meiosis therefore allows the production of round haploid spermatids. Spermiogenesis consists of the differentiation of round spermatids into spermatids at various degrees of elongation and finally into spermatozoa. Spermatozoa are released into the lumen of seminiferous tubules during a final stage called spermiation.

The cycle of the seminiferous epithelium

The notion of cycle of the seminiferous epithelium was already well established at the beginning of the 20th century, thanks in particular to the works of Brown (Reference Brown1885), Benda (Reference Benda1887), Von Ebner (Reference Von Ebner1888) and Regaud (Reference Regaud1901).

The seminiferous epithelium is composed of several generations of germ cells. This is due to the fact that the engagement of new generations of sperm cells, from spermatogonia to spermatozoa, continues throughout the inner surface of the membrane of the seminiferous tubes without waiting for the preceding generations to complete their evolution and to disappear as spermatozoa into the lumen of the tubules (Regaud, Reference Regaud1901). The fate of a generation of germ cells is closely related to the development of the other generations of neighboring cells in a section of seminiferous tubule. The result is the presence of cellular associations which follow one another in time, at a given point of the seminiferous tubule, in a perfectly regular order, characterizing the so-called cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. The consistency of these cellular associations results from two phenomena:

  1. (i) At one point of the tubule, new spermatogonia begin their divisions and engage in spermatogenesis at time intervals of constant duration.

  2. (ii) Once the germinal cells are involved in spermatogenesis, their rate of differentiation is always the same and each step has a fixed and constant duration.

The cell associations identified within a cycle of the seminiferous epithelium are used to divide the cycle into phases or stages allowing a chronological division of the latter. In the bull, the classification into eight stages, using spermiation as a reference point, serves as a reference (Curtis, Reference Curtis1918; Roosen-Runge and Giesel, Reference Roosen-Runge and Giesel1950; Ortavant, Reference Ortavant1959; Cupps and Laben, Reference Cupps and Laben1960; Amann, Reference Amann1962a; Hochereau, Reference Hochereau1967; Hochereau-de Reviers, Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1970) (Figure 2). However, there is a second classification (Clermont and Leblond, Reference Clermont and Leblond1955; Kramer, Reference Kramer1960; Berndston and Desjardins, Reference Berndston and Desjardins1974), using the meiotic divisions as a reference point, and based on the development of the acrosome during spermiogenesis (Figure 3), which follows the logic of the classifications proposed in rats (Leblond and Clermont, Reference Leblond and Clermont1952) and in mice (Oackberg, Reference Oackberg1956).

Figure 2 Cellular associations at each of the eight stages of the bovine seminiferous epithelium cycle (Roman numerals I to VIII) using spermiation as a reference point (end of stage VIII). The types of germ cells observed are A=type A spermatogonia; In=intermediate spermatogonia; B=type B spermatogonia; L=leptotene primary spermatocytes; Z=zygotene primary spermatocytes; P=pachytene primary spermatocytes; D=diplotene primary spermatocytes; SS=secondary spermatocytes; Sa=round spermatids; Sb1, Sb2, Sc, Sd1, Sd2=elongating and elongated spermatids at various steps of differentiation (from Amann, Reference Amann1962a).

Figure 3 Cellular associations at each of the 12 stages of the bovine seminiferous epithelium cycle (Roman numerals I to XII) based on the development of the acrosome during spermiogenesis. The types of germ cells observed are A=type A spermatogonia; In=intermediate spermatogonia; B1=type B1 spermatogonia; B2=type B2 spermatogonia; PL=preleptotene primary spermatocytes; L=leptotene primary spermatocytes; Z=zygotene primary spermatocytes; P=pachytene primary spermatocytes; II=secondary spermatocytes; 1 to 14=spermatids (from Berndston and Desjardins, Reference Berndston and Desjardins1974).

In bulls, the duration of the seminiferous epithelium cycle is 13.5 days. The total duration of spermatogenesis is 61 days, that is 4.5 times the duration of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. It can be divided into three parts, mitotic proliferation (also called spermatocytogenesis), meiosis and cytodifferentiation (also called spermiogenesis), whose respective durations are 21, 23 and 17 days.

The spermatogenetic wave

In contrast to the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium, which is a histological phenomenon occurring at a given place in the seminiferous tubule in time, the spermatogenetic wave is used to describe the spatial arrangement of cell associations along the tubules. As early as Reference Von Ebner1871, Von Ebner reported in the rat that the various cell associations are distributed according to a regular order which corresponds to the numerical order of the stages of the cycle. Spermatogenesis progresses along the seminiferous tubule in the manner of a wave, and therefore, it is referred to as the spermatogenetic wave.

Benda (Reference Benda1887) demonstrated the existence of the spermatogenetic wave in a large number of mammalian species (mice, guinea pigs, rabbits, rams, bulls, pigs, dogs and cats). Regaud (Reference Regaud1901) gave a description of the spermatogenetic wave that remained accepted by scientists for more than half a century: ‘The wave is to space what the cycle is to time.’ Curtis (Reference Curtis1918) confirmed the existence of the spermatogenetic wave in mice and rabbits and noted in these species that, from the junction between the tubules and the rete testis, the numerical order of the cell associations decreases to the point of inversion located at the bottom of the tube loop (but this organization is specific to rodents). He noted furthermore the presence of irregularities in this numerical succession but did not question the discovery of Von Ebner, unlike Cleland (Reference Cleland1951), who denied the existence of the spermatogenetic wave, thinking that the seminiferous tubule is divided in regions that operate autonomously. In 1961, Perey, Clermont and Leblond undertook a careful study of the spermatogenetic wave in the rat by examining complete seminiferous tubules reconstructed from serological histological sections. The authors confirmed that the cell associations are distributed along the tubules in the order corresponding to the numerical order of the stages of the cycle, but they noted numerous irregularities which they call ‘modulations’ (Figure 4). A modulation consists of a series of tubule segments having a numerical order of increasing first, then decreasing, until the increasing general progression is seen again. Despite these irregularities, a portion of a tubule occupied by a given cell association (corresponding to a given stage of the cycle) is always bordered by segments that are in the immediately preceding or subsequent stage. This is called ‘the continuity rule.’

Figure 4 Low power photograph of a longitudinally cut rat seminiferous tubule (magnification ×20). The portion of tubule between the two arrows constitutes a spermatogenic wave (from the proximal to the distal end of the tubule) with a modulation (shadowed segment) (from Perey et al., Reference Perey, Clermont and Leblond1961).

Perey et al. (Reference Perey, Clermont and Leblond1961) thus defined the spermatogenetic wave as ‘a sequence of segments showing the complete series of cell associations corresponding to the stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. One or more modulations must, however, be excluded from the sequence of the segments considered.’ The comparison of the characteristics of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium and the spermatogenetic wave shows that the wave is not in space what the cycle is in time, contrary to what Regaud proposed in 1901. The wave is not a dynamic process but is a static way to describe in the spatial distribution of the associations along the tubule.

Kinetics of bull spermatogenesis

Listed is the description of the stages of the seminiferous epithelium in the bull from the classification established by Amann (Reference Amann1962a). There are eight spermatogenic stages in the bull:

  • Stage I is characterized by A spermatogonia, B spermatogonia or leptotene primary spermatocytes, pachytene primary spermatocytes and Sb1 spermatids.

  • Stage II is characterized by A spermatogonia, zygotene primary spermatocytes, pachytene primary spermatocytes and Sb2 spermatids.

  • Stage III is characterized by two generations of A spermatogonia, zygotene primary spermatocytes, diplotene primary spermatocytes (some diplotene primary spermatocytes can still be seen in stage IV) and Sc spermatids.

  • Stage IV is characterized by A spermatogonia, intermediate spermatogonia, zygotene primary spermatocytes (some zygotene primary spermatocytes can still be seen in stage V), secondary spermatocytes and Sc spermatids.

  • Stage V is characterized by A spermatogonia, intermediate spermatogonia, pachytene primary spermatocytes and two generations of spermatids (Sa and Sd1) (Figure 1).

  • Stage VI is characterized by A spermatogonia, intermediate spermatogonia (some intermediate spermatogonia can still be seen in stage VII), pachytene primary spermatocytes, and two generations of spermatids (Sa and Sd1).

  • Stage VII is characterized by A spermatogonia, B spermatogonia, pachytene primary spermatocytes, and two generations of spermatids (Sa and Sd2).

  • Stage VIII is characterized by A spermatogonia, two generations of B spermatogonia (B1 and B2), pachytene primary spermatocytes, and two generations of spermatids (Sa and Sb2 just before spermiation).

The duration of each of the eight stages of the seminiferous epithelium is summarized in Table 1.

Table 1 Time duration (in days) of the eight stages (Roman numerals I to VIII) of bull seminiferous epithelium, and stages at which the mitotic and meiotic divisions of the germ cells take place during the bull spermatogenesis.

M1=first meiotic division; M2=second meiotic division.

a Asymetric divisions where A1 spermatogonia produce A1 and A2 spermatogonia.

b Asynchronous divisions, some A spermatogonia (A) divide into intermediate spermatogonia, others (Ab) divide into A spermatogonia. The latter undergo a division into intermediate spermatogonia in late stage IV.

c Asynchronous divisions, some intermediate spermatogonia divide in stage VII, others in stage VIII.

d Asynchronous divisions, some B spermatogonia divide in stage VIII, others in stage I.

e Asymetric divisions where A2 spermatogonia produce A1 and A3 spermatogonia.

f Asymetric divisions where A0 spermatogonia produce A0 and A1 spermatogonia.

Spermatogonia renewal

Now that the basic notions of the kinetics of spermatogenesis have been reviewed, it is possible to address the complex problem of the renewal of the spermatogonial population. It is still difficult today to state with certainty the exact mode of renewal of spermatogonia in the bull testis. Despite numerous studies on the subject (Clermont and Leblond, Reference Clermont and Leblond1955; Roosen-Runge, Reference Roosen-Runge1955; Ortavant, Reference Ortavant1959; Kramer, Reference Kramer1960; Amann, Reference Amann1962a; Hochereau, Reference Hochereau1967; Hochereau-de Reviers, Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1970 and Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1971), several hypotheses remain. Yet, a number of recurring elements coincide and can be considered likely.

At least three criteria must be taken into account for the study of the renewal of spermatogonia: their rate of division, their rate of degeneration, and the presence of quiescent (resting) cells. These three criteria affect the number of cells in each category. The difference between the studies can be explained in part by the fact that the authors favored some criteria compared with others according to the methodology used. These methodologies include the use of radioelements incorporating into the pre-mitotic cells during the DNA synthesis phase (the duration of which is not equivalent for all types of spermatogonia; Hochereau, Reference Hochereau1967), morphological evolution of the different categories of spermatogonia (shape, size, nucleoli aspect), and stereological studies based on histological sections of testis at different stages of the seminiferous epithelium).

It is now established that there are six divisions allowing the proliferation of spermatogonia involved in spermatogenesis in the bull (Hochereau, Reference Hochereau1967), three for A spermatogonia, one for intermediate spermatogonia, two for B spermatogonia, even though Ortavant (Reference Ortavant1959) and Amann (Reference Amann1962b) only counted five. These divisions occur at precise stages of the seminiferous epithelium, but there are still some slight divergences on that point according to the authors (Table 1).

The second point of debate is the way in which spermatogonia are committed to renew themselves and/or engage in spermatogenesis. There, two theories depend on the presence or the absence of asymmetric divisions in the spermatogonia population (Figure 5). An asymmetric division is a cell division that generates two different daughter cells. In the schemes proposed by the French groups, asymmetric spermatogonial divisions are present. Indeed, in the model proposed by Ortavant (Reference Ortavant1959), the first spermatogonial mitotic division (from A1 spermatogonia), results in A1 spermatogonia and A2 spermatogonia. There is therefore a renewal of the population of A1 spermatogonia while the sister A2 spermatogonia continues its progression in spermatogenesis (Figure 5a).

Figure 5 Model of spermatogonial renewal in the bull proposed by Ortavant (Reference Ortavant1959), Amann (Reference Amann1962b), and Hochereau-de Reviers (Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1971). The major difference comes from the presence of asymmetric mitotic divisions of A1 spermatogonia in the model proposed by Ortavant (a), of A0 and A2 spermatogonia in the model proposed by Hochereau-de Reviers (b), whereas these asymmetric divisions do not exist in the model proposed by Amann (c). On the other hand, Amann proposes an asynchrony of the mitotic divisions which is not found in the models proposed by Ortavant and Hochereau-de Reviers. The types of germ cells are A0=type A0 spermatogonia ; A1=type A1 spermatogonia; A2=type A2 spermatogonia; In=intermediate spermatogonia; B1=type B1 spermatogonia; B2=type B2 spermatogonia; Sptc=spermatocytes.

In the model proposed by Hochereau-de Reviers (Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1970 and Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1971), the second spermatogonial mitotic division (from A2 spermatogonia), results in A1 spermatogonia and A3 spermatogonia. Again, there is a renewal of the A1 spermatogonia population while A3 spermatogonia continues its progression in spermatogenesis. In addition, A0 spermatogonia are capable of generating A1 spermatogonia while maintaining a reserve of A0 spermatogonia during an asymmetric mitotic division (Figure 5b). In fact, it is very likely that both types of mitotic divisions (symmetric and asymmetric) coexist as it has been shown that an increase in the germ stem cell population is present long after puberty in the bull (Attal and Courot, Reference Attal and Courot1963).

In the schemes proposed by the Dutch (Kramer, Reference Kramer1960) and the American teams (Clermont and Leblond, Reference Clermont and Leblond1955; Roosen-Runge, Reference Roosen-Runge1955; Amann, Reference Amann1962b), asymmetric spermatogonial divisions do not exist. Therefore, a proportion of the A1 spermatogonia divide to renew the population of A1 spermatogonia and the remainder divides into A2 spermatogonia which engage in the spermatogenetic process. Moreover, Kramer (Reference Kramer1960) and Amann (Reference Amann1962b) propose a model of asynchronous spermatogonial generations (Figure 5c) which is not shared by Ortavant (Reference Ortavant1959) and Hochereau-de Reviers (Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1970, Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1971) and Hochereau-de Reviers et al. (Reference Hochereau-de Reviers, Monet-Kuntz and Courot1987) (Table 1).

Comparative efficiency of spermatogenesis across species

Spermatogenesis has been evaluated qualitatively by the general appearance of seminiferous tubules in histologic sections and quantitatively by differential cell counts. Given the life span and theoretical yield of a specific germ cell, a potential daily expression of spermatozoan production can be obtained from the number of germ cells of each type in the testis (Kennelly and Foote, Reference Kennelly and Foote1964; Amann, Reference Amann1970). Daily sperm production per gram of decapsulated testis is a measure of efficiency of spermatogenesis, and it is useful for species comparison (Amann et al., Reference Amann, Johnson, Thompson and Pickett1976). Humans have a much lower efficiency (4 to 6×106/g) of spermatogenesis (Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Petty and Neaves1981) than other species, including rabbits (25×106/g), hamsters (24×106/g), rats (20 to 24×106/g), rhesus monkeys (23×106/g), boars (23×106/g), rams (21×106/g), stallions (16 to 19×106/g) and bulls (12×106/g)(Amann et al., Reference Amann, Johnson, Thompson and Pickett1976; Amann, Reference Amann1981; Johnson, Reference Johnson1986). The lower efficiency of spermatogenesis in human testes compared with other species results from a longer duration of spermatogenesis, longer cycle length and lower density of germ cells (Johnson, Reference Johnson1986). For instance, the percentage of the human testis occupied by seminiferous tubules and seminiferous epithelium is lower than that for rats, horses and bulls (Figure 6; Johnson, Reference Johnson1986).

Figure 6 Percentage of testicular parenchyma of the rat, horse, bull, and human occupied by seminiferous tubules or seminiferous epithelium (from Johnson, Reference Johnson1986).

Germ cell degeneration at specific developmental steps of spermatogenesis has been qualified by comparing daily sperm production/gram based on germ cell types in different steps of development on various species such as the human (Bar et al., Reference Bar, Moore and Paulsen1971; Johnson, Reference Johnson1986), rats (Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Lebovitz and Samson1984), horse (Johnson, Reference Johnson1985), and bull (Amann, Reference Amann1962b; Amann et al., Reference Amann, Johnson, Thompson and Pickett1976) (Figure 7). While humans experience a 30% to 40% reduction in potential sperm production during the end of meiosis, there is no comparable loss or degeneration during meiosis of the stallion or bull. In the breeding season of the stallion, there is a larger number of A spermatogonia whose progeny are sustained, resulting in significant degeneration of B spermatogonia during spermatocytogenesis and the end of meiosis (Johnson, Reference Johnson1985). In the bull, a significant number of degenerated germ cells have been noted during spermatocytogenesis. A significant loss of about 30% occur between the steps of A and intermediate spermatogonia, a second phase of degeneration of about 30% occur at the steps of B1 and between B1 and B2 spermatogonia (Hochereau-de Reviers, Reference Hochereau-de Reviers1970; Berndston and Desjardins, Reference Berndston and Desjardins1974). Without these early phases of germ cells degeneration, bulls would have a daily sperm production around 30×106/g. Bulls have no significant germ cell loss during spermiogenesis (Johnson, Reference Johnson1986).

Figure 7 Daily sperm production per gram of testicular parenchyma based on different germ cell types in the rat, horse, bull and human (from Amann et al., Reference Amann, Johnson, Thompson and Pickett1976; modified from Johnson, Reference Johnson1986).

Age influence on spermatogenesis and reproductive performance

In addition to significant germ cell loss at the end of meiosis in younger men, older men experience additional germ cell degeneration during prophase of meiosis (Johnson, Reference Johnson1986). Loss of late leptotene, zygotene, and pachytene spermatocytes in older men was the major source of the aged-related decrease in daily sperm production whereas there appears to be no age-related difference during spermiogenesis in humans. Age-related reduction of bull fertility has been poorly described in the scientific literature. This is because the bulls in AI centers are replaced before experiencing a real decline in their fertility and a real testicular degeneration. Puberty is defined by Wolf et al. (Reference Wolf, Almquist and Hale1965) as the age at which the first ejaculate containing a minimum of 50 million sperm with at least 10% of motility is collected. This definition is still valid today; puberty is reached at 42 weeks on average but this age can vary from 38 to 46 depending on the breed (Lunstra et al., Reference Lunstra, Ford and Echternkamp1978). Because their spermatic efficiency continues to progress until full maturity, a bull is then able to produce enough spermatozoa for two useable ejaculates a day. In production, bulls are typically harvested three times a week for what seems to be a good compromise between the number of doses of semen produced and what is possible to manage for the AI center staff. With age, sperm production tends to decrease but the existence of fertile bulls has been reported until 19 years of age (Bishop, Reference Bishop1970).

Several hypotheses can be advanced regarding the decrease of spermatic potential in older individuals. Germ cell degeneration in meiotic prophase is certainly a way of eliminating cells with chromosomal abnormalities (Johnson, Reference Johnson1986), but this explanation is apparently not the only one. Germ cell degeneration may also be a mechanism limiting the number of cells that can be sustained by available Sertoli cells (Huckins, Reference Huckins1978) because the number of A spermatogonia is directly correlated with the number of Sertoli cells in many species (Hochereau-de Reviers and Courot, Reference Hochereau-de Reviers and Courot1978). The age-related decline in spermatogenic potential could therefore be explained by the decrease in the number of Sertoli cells.

Sertoli cells and puberty

Sertoli cells are named after Enrico Sertoli, who first described them in 1865 (Sertoli, Reference Sertoli1865). Sertoli cells are the main somatic component of the seminiferous tubules. Sertoli cells have a multi-lobed nucleus, a cytoplasm rich in endoplasmic reticulum, glycoproteins and cytoplasmic droplets, the amount of which is inversely proportional to spermatogenic development. Similarly, the cytoskeleton of Sertoli cells varies during the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium, which is indicative of the high plasticity of the Sertoli cell that is synchronized with the cyclic evolution of germ cells (Russell and Griswold, Reference Russell and Griswold1993). Sertoli cells are large pyramidal epithelial cells whose base is in contact with the basement membrane of the seminiferous tubes (which they produce with the peritubular cells) and whose apical part goes up to the level of the light of the seminiferous tubes. The Sertoli cells establish tight junctions between them at puberty, which contribute to the formation of the blood-testis barrier (Dym and Fawcett, Reference Dym and Fawcett1970). Several other types of cell junctions are present between Sertoli cells and germ cells such as lacunar or communicating junctions, adherent junctions (desmosome junctions and specialized junctions such as tubulobulbar complexes around spermatids) (Russell and Griswold, Reference Russell and Griswold1993).

Sertoli cells have many functions within the testicle; they constitute a barrier which prevents the free access of the blood components to the germinal cells located in the adluminal compartment of the testicle. The latter are then protected from possible toxic or mutagenic factors and an autoimmune reaction of the body to its own spermatozoa. It is probably also preventing loss of specific concentrations of androgen-binding protein (ABP), inhibin, activin, and enzyme inhibitors within the luminal compartment of the tubules (Garner and Hafez, Reference Garner and Hafez1980).

Sertoli cells contribute to the elaboration the adluminal fluid and create a specific ionic environment, essential for the differentiation of male germ cells toward the apical part of the seminiferous tubules (Setchell, Reference Setchell1970). They facilitate the passage of certain important compounds such as testosterone and glucose and more generally, they have a nurturing role toward the germinal cells and provide them with energetic substrates such as lactate and pyruvate that are necessary for the survival of the germinal cells (Jutte et al., Reference Jutte, Grootegoed, Rommerts and van der Molen1982). These functions are controlled by FSH (Jutte et al., Reference Jutte, Jansen, Grootegoed, Rommerts, Clausen and van der Molen1983).

Sertoli cells ensure the phagocytosis of degenerative germ cells and residual bodies and the spermiation of mature spermatids. Sertoli cells synthesize, under the control of FSH and androgens, a large number of proteins that they secrete toward the light of the seminiferous tubes, toward the germinal cells and the interstitial space (Lejeune et al., Reference Lejeune, Jégou, Carreau and Saez1996). To mention only the main ones, inhibin and activin play a role in the hypothalamic–pituitary axis in the release of gonadotropins, but they also act on the function of Leydig cells within the testis; ABP released under the influence of FSH and androgens, plays a role in the bioavailability of androgens, regulating spermatogenesis and sperm production (Ritzèn et al., Reference Ritzèn, Boitani, Parvinen, French and Feldman1982); transferrin, a glycoprotein that carries iron to iron-requiring cells, whose concentration in seminal plasma is directly linked to spermatic production and fertility (Gilmont et al., Reference Gilmont, Senger, Sylvester and Griswold1990; Ing et al., 2018). In addition, many growth factors are produced such as seminiferous growth factor which plays a role in the proliferation of spermatogonia cells, nerve growth factor which plays a role during the DNA synthesis phase of preleptoten spermatocytes, and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) which acts on germ cell differentiation (Mauduit and Benahmed, Reference Mauduit and Benahmed1996).

Finally, Sertoli cells in co-culture with germ cells have shown to be able to stimulate RNA and DNA synthesis by the germ cells (Rivarola et al., Reference Rivarola, Sanchez and Saez1985). After a massive proliferation phase during fetal life, Sertoli cells gradually lose their ability to divide. In the bull, there is no further division of Sertoli cells 6 months after birth (Attal and Courot, Reference Attal and Courot1963), their number reaching a maximum at 28 weeks in Holstein bulls (Curtis and Amann, Reference Curtis and Amann1981). Sperm production is therefore directly correlated with the number of Sertoli cells fixed before puberty (Berndston et al., Reference Berndston, Igboeli and Parker1987). Failing to act on the efficiency of spermatogenesis after puberty, it is possible to hasten the onset of puberty by subjecting bulls to a high plane of nutrition during the first 6 months of life, optimizing the availability of saleable semen doses in young Holstein bulls (Dance et al., Reference Dance, Thundathil, Blondin and Kastelic2015) and Holstein-Friesen bulls (Byrne et al., Reference Byrne, Fair, English, Cirot, Staub, Lonergan and Kenny2018) without affecting semen quality (Dance et al., Reference Dance, Thundathil, Wilde, Blondin and Kastelic2016). Finally, some authors have also shown that it is possible to obtain mature Angus-Charolais bulls with greater testicular weight and sperm production by improving the nutrition during calfhood between 10 and 30 weeks of age (Brito et al., Reference Brito, Barth, Rawlings, Wilde, Crews, Mir and Kastelic2007).

Conclusion

Spermatogenesis is a long and orderly process through which spermatozoa are produced within seminiferous tubules and is divided into spermatocytogenesis (mitosis), meiosis, and spermiogenesis (differentiation without division). Spermatocytogenesis involves mitotic cell division to increase the yield of spermatogenesis and to produce stem cells and primary spermatocytes. Spermiogenesis involves an unsurpassed example of cell differentiation in the production of a self-propelled, penetrative enzyme-containing, and male genome delivery system, spermatozoa. Germ cell degeneration occurs throughout spermatogenesis, but is greater during spermatocytogenesis and meiosis and can vary with pubertal development, age, and species. Sertoli cell number is important in determining daily production of spermatozoa in bulls as well as in other species. The reason bulls have a lower efficiency of spermatogenesis than most species, other than humans, is not clear.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Marie-Thérèse Hochereau-de Reviers for helpful discussion, Marie-Laure Touzé for bibliographic research, and Caitlin Edwards for English proofreading.

Declaration of interest

Both authors declare no conflict of interest and nor competing interest.

Ethics statement

Not applicable.

Software and data repository resources

Not applicable.

References

Amann, RP 1962a. Reproductive capacity of dairy bulls. III. The effect of ejaculation frequency, unilateral vasectomy, and age on spermatogenesis. American Journal of Anatomy 110, 4967.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amann, RP 1962b. Reproductive capacity of dairy bulls. IV. Spermatogenesis and testicular germ cell degeneration. American Journal of Anatomy 110, 6978.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amann, RP 1970. Sperm production rates. In The testis (ed. AD Johnson, WR Gomes and NL VanDemark), pp. 433482. Academic Press, New York, USA.Google Scholar
Amann, RP 1981. A critical review of methods for evaluation of spermatogenesis from seminal characteristics. Journal of Andrology 2, 3758.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amann, RP, Johnson, L, Thompson, DL Jr and Pickett, BW 1976. Daily spermatozoal production, epididymal spermatozoal reserves and transit time of spermatozoa through the epididymis of the rhesus monkey. Biology of Reproduction 15, 586592.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Attal, J and Courot, M 1963. Testicular development and onset of spermatogenesis in bulls. Annales de Biologie Animale, Biochimie, Biophysique 3, 219241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bar, AB, Moore, DJ and Paulsen, CA 1971. Germinal cell loss during human spermatogenesis. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 25, 7580.Google Scholar
Benda, C 1887. Untersuchungen über den Bau des Funktionierenden Samenkanälchens einiger Saugetiere und Folgerungen für die Spermatogenese dieser Wirbeltierklasse. Archiv Mikroskopie Anatomie Entwicklung 30, 19110.Google Scholar
Berndston, WE and Desjardins, C 1974. The cycle of the seminiferous epithelium and spermatogenesis in the bovine testis. American Journal of Anatomy 140, 167179.Google Scholar
Berndston, WE, Igboeli, G and Parker, WG 1987. The numbers of Sertoli cells in mature Holstein bulls and their relationship to quantitative aspects of spermatogenesis. Biology of Reproduction 37, 6067.Google Scholar
Bishop, MWH 1970. Aging and reproduction in the male. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 12 (suppl), 6587.Google ScholarPubMed
Brito, LF, Barth, AD, Rawlings, NC, Wilde, RE, Crews, DH Jr, Mir, PS and Kastelic, JP 2007. Effect of improved nutrition during calfhood on serum metabolic hormones, gonadotropins, and testosterone concentrations, and on testicular development in bulls. Domestic Animal Endocrinology 33, 460469.Google Scholar
Brown, HH 1885. On spermatogenesis in the rat. Quarterly Journal of Microscopial Science 25, 343370.Google Scholar
Byrne, CJ, Fair, S, English, AM, Cirot, M, Staub, C, Lonergan, P and Kenny, DA 2018. Plane of nutrition pre and post-six months of age in Holstein-Friesian bulls: I. Effect of performance, body composition, age at puberty and post-pubertal semen production. Journal of Dairy Science 101, 113 in press.Google Scholar
Cleland, KW 1951. The spermatogenic cycle of the guinea pig. Australian Journal of Scientific Research B4, 344369.Google Scholar
Clermont, Y and Leblond, CP 1955. Spermiogenesis of man, monkey, ram, and other mammals as shown by the “periodic acid Schiff” technique. American Journal of Anatomy 96, 229255.Google Scholar
Cupps, PT and Laben, RC 1960. Spermatogenesis in relation to spermatozoa concentration in bovine semen. Journal of Dairy Science 43, 782786.Google Scholar
Curtis, GM 1918. The morphology of the mammalian seminiferous tubule. American Journal of Anatomy 24, 339394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curtis, SK and Amann, MA 1981. Testicular development and establishment of spermatogenesis in Holstein bulls. Journal of Animal Science 53, 16451657.Google Scholar
Dance, A., Thundathil, J, Blondin, P and Kastelic, J 2016. Enhanced early-life nutrition of Holstein bulls increases sperm production potential without decreasing postpubertal semen quality. Theriogenology 86, 687694.Google Scholar
Dance, A, Thundathil, J, Wilde, R, Blondin, P and Kastelic, J 2015. Enhanced early-life nutrition promotes hormone production and reproductive development in Holstein bulls. Journal of Dairy Science 98, 987998.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dym, M and Fawcett, DW 1970. The blood-testis barrier in the rat and the physiological compartmentation of the seminiferous epithelium. Biology of Reproduction 3, 308326.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Garner, DL and Hafez, ESE 1980. Spermatozoa. In Reproduction in farm animals, 4th edition (ed. ESE Hafez), pp. 167188. Lea and Febiger, Philadelphia, USA.Google Scholar
Gilmont, DL, Senger, PL, Sylvester, SR and Griswold, MD 1990. Seminal transferrin and spermatogenic capability in the bull. Biology of Reproduction 43, 151157.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hochereau, MT 1967. Synthèse de l’ADN au cours des multiplications et du renouvellement des spermatogonies chez le taureau. Archives d’Anatomie Microscopique 56 (suppl), 8596.Google Scholar
Hochereau-de Reviers, MT 1970. Etude des divisions spermatogoniales et du renouvellement de la spermatogonie souche chez le taureau. PhD thesis. Paris University of Sciences, France.Google Scholar
Hochereau-de Reviers, MT 1971. Etude cinétique des spermatogonies chez les mammifères. In La cinétique de prolifération cellulaire. INSERM Symposia series seminar, volume 18, pp. 189216. INSERM, Paris, France.Google Scholar
Hochereau-de Reviers, MT and Courot, M 1978. Sertoli cells and development of seminiferous epithelium. Annales de Biologie Animale, Biochimie, Biophysique 18, 573583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hochereau-de Reviers, MT, Monet-Kuntz, C and Courot, M 1987. Spermatogenesis and Sertoli cell numbers and function in rams and bulls. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 34 (suppl), 101114.Google ScholarPubMed
Huckins, C 1978. The morphology and kinetics of spermatogonial degeneration in normal adult rats: an analysis using a simplified classification of the germinal epithelium. Anatomical Records 190, 905926.Google Scholar
Ing, NH, Curley, KO Jr, Welsh, TH Jr, Johnson, L and Staub, C 2018. Anatomy and physiology of the male reproductive system and potential targets of toxicants. In Comprehensive toxicology, volume 4, 3rd edition (ed. CA McQueen), pp. 263. Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, L 1985. Increased daily sperm production in the breeding season of stallions is explained by an elevated population of spermatogonia. Biology of Reproduction 32, 11811190.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson, L 1986. Review article: Spermatogenesis and aging in human. Journal of Andrology 7, 331354.Google Scholar
Johnson, L, Lebovitz, RM and Samson, WK 1984. Germ cell degeneration in normal and microwave-irradiated rats: potential sperm production rates at different developmental steps in spermatogenesis. The Anatomical Record 209, 501507.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson, L, Petty, CS and Neaves, WB 1981. A new approach to quantification of spermatogenesis and its application to germinal cell attrition during human spermatogenesis. Biologie of Reproduction 25, 217226.Google Scholar
Jutte, NHPM, Grootegoed, JA, Rommerts, FFG and van der Molen, HJ 1983. FSH stimulation of the production of pyruvate and lactate by Sertoli cells may be involved in the regulation of spermatogenesis. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 68, 219226.Google Scholar
Jutte, NHPM, Jansen, R, Grootegoed, JA, Rommerts, FFG, Clausen, OPF and van der Molen, HJ 1982. Regulation of survival of rat pachytene spermatocytes by lactate supply from Sertoli cells. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility 65, 431438.Google Scholar
Kennelly, JJ and Foote, RH 1964. Sampling boar testes to study spermatogenesis quantitatively and to predict sperm production. Journal of Animal Science 23, 160167.Google Scholar
Kramer, MF 1960. Spermatogenesis bij de stier. Thesis. Rijkuniversiteit, Utrecht, the Netherlands.Google Scholar
Leblond, CP and Clermont, Y 1952. Definition of the stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium in the rat. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 55, 548573.Google Scholar
Lejeune, H, Jégou, B, Carreau, S and Saez, JM 1996. Régulation paracrine et autocrine des fonctions testiculaires. In Endocrinologie masculine (ed. MA Drosdowsky, J Belaisch and A Vermeulen), pp. 75101. Doin Editeurs, Paris, France.Google Scholar
Lunstra, DD, Ford, JJ and Echternkamp, SE 1978. Puberty in beef bulls: hormone concentrations, growth, testicular development, sperm production and sexual aggressiveness in bulls of different breeds. Journal of Animal Science 46, 10541062.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mauduit, C and Benahmed, M 1996. Growth factors in the testis development and function. In Male gametes production and quality (ed. S Hamamah and R Mieusset), pp. 345. Les Editions INSERM, Paris, France.Google Scholar
Oackberg, EF 1956. Duration of spermatogenesis in the mouse and timing of stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium. American Journal of Anatomy 99, 507516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ortavant, R 1959. Spermatogenesis and morphology of the spermatozoon. In Reproduction in domestics animals. volume 2 (ed. HH Cole and PE Cupps), pp. 150. Academic Press, New York, USA.Google Scholar
Perey, BY, Clermont, Y and Leblond, CP 1961. The wave of the seminiferous epithelium in the rat. American Journal of Anatomy 108, 4777.Google Scholar
Regaud, C 1901. Etude sur la structure des tubes séminifères et sur la spermatogenèse chez les mammifères. Archives d’Anatomie microscopique et de Morphologie expérimentale 4, 101156, 231–280.Google Scholar
Ritzèn, EM, Boitani, C, Parvinen, M, French, FC and Feldman, M 1982. Stage-dependent secretion of ABP by rat seminiferous tubules. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 25, 2533.Google Scholar
Rivarola, MA, Sanchez, P and Saez, JM 1985. Stimulation of ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis in spermatogenic cells by their coculture with Sertoli cells. Endocrinology 117, 17961802.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roosen-Runge, EC 1955. Untersuchungen über die Degeneration samenbildender Zellen in der normalen Spermatogenese der Ratte. Zeitschrift für Zellforschung und Mikroskopische Anatomie 41, 221235.Google Scholar
Roosen-Runge, EC and Giesel, LO 1950. Quantitative studies on spermatogenesis in the albino rat. American Journal of Anatomy 87, 130.Google Scholar
Russell, LD and Griswold, MD 1993. The Sertoli cell. Cache River Press. St Louis, MO, USA.Google Scholar
Sertoli, E 1865. Dell’esistenza di particolari cellule ramificate nei canalicoli seminiferi del testculo humano. Morgagni 7, 3139.Google Scholar
Setchell, BP 1970. Testicular blood supply, lymphatic drainage, and secretion fluid. In The testis. Development, anatomy, and physiology. (ed. AD Johnson, WR Gomes and NL Vandemark), pp. 101239. Academic Press, New York, USA.Google Scholar
Von Ebner, V 1871. Untersuchungen über den Bau der Samenkanälchen und die Entwicklung der Spermatozoiden bei den Säugentieren und beim Menschen. In Rollets Untersuchungen aus dem Institut für Physiologie und Histologie in Graz. pp. 200–236. Leipzig, Germany.Google Scholar
Von Ebner, V 1888. Zur Spermatogenese bei den Säugentieren. Archiv Mikroskopie Anatomie Entwicklung 31, 236292.Google Scholar
Wolf, FR, Almquist, JO and Hale, EB 1965. Prepuberal behavior and puberal characteristics of beef bulls on high nutrient allowance. Journal of Animal Science 24, 761765.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1 Seminiferous tubules in the bull testis viewed by brightfield microscopy. Seminiferous tubules are composed of myoid cells (MC), Sertoli cells (SC) and germ cells. In this stage V tubule, the germ cells include A spermatogonia (A), pachytene primary spermatocytes (P), secondary spermatocytes (SS), Sa (Sa) and Sd1 (Sd1) spermatids. Bar length equals 10 µm.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Cellular associations at each of the eight stages of the bovine seminiferous epithelium cycle (Roman numerals I to VIII) using spermiation as a reference point (end of stage VIII). The types of germ cells observed are A=type A spermatogonia; In=intermediate spermatogonia; B=type B spermatogonia; L=leptotene primary spermatocytes; Z=zygotene primary spermatocytes; P=pachytene primary spermatocytes; D=diplotene primary spermatocytes; SS=secondary spermatocytes; Sa=round spermatids; Sb1, Sb2, Sc, Sd1, Sd2=elongating and elongated spermatids at various steps of differentiation (from Amann, 1962a).

Figure 2

Figure 3 Cellular associations at each of the 12 stages of the bovine seminiferous epithelium cycle (Roman numerals I to XII) based on the development of the acrosome during spermiogenesis. The types of germ cells observed are A=type A spermatogonia; In=intermediate spermatogonia; B1=type B1 spermatogonia; B2=type B2 spermatogonia; PL=preleptotene primary spermatocytes; L=leptotene primary spermatocytes; Z=zygotene primary spermatocytes; P=pachytene primary spermatocytes; II=secondary spermatocytes; 1 to 14=spermatids (from Berndston and Desjardins, 1974).

Figure 3

Figure 4 Low power photograph of a longitudinally cut rat seminiferous tubule (magnification ×20). The portion of tubule between the two arrows constitutes a spermatogenic wave (from the proximal to the distal end of the tubule) with a modulation (shadowed segment) (from Perey et al., 1961).

Figure 4

Table 1 Time duration (in days) of the eight stages (Roman numerals I to VIII) of bull seminiferous epithelium, and stages at which the mitotic and meiotic divisions of the germ cells take place during the bull spermatogenesis.

Figure 5

Figure 5 Model of spermatogonial renewal in the bull proposed by Ortavant (1959), Amann (1962b), and Hochereau-de Reviers (1971). The major difference comes from the presence of asymmetric mitotic divisions of A1 spermatogonia in the model proposed by Ortavant (a), of A0 and A2 spermatogonia in the model proposed by Hochereau-de Reviers (b), whereas these asymmetric divisions do not exist in the model proposed by Amann (c). On the other hand, Amann proposes an asynchrony of the mitotic divisions which is not found in the models proposed by Ortavant and Hochereau-de Reviers. The types of germ cells are A0=type A0 spermatogonia ; A1=type A1 spermatogonia; A2=type A2 spermatogonia; In=intermediate spermatogonia; B1=type B1 spermatogonia; B2=type B2 spermatogonia; Sptc=spermatocytes.

Figure 6

Figure 6 Percentage of testicular parenchyma of the rat, horse, bull, and human occupied by seminiferous tubules or seminiferous epithelium (from Johnson, 1986).

Figure 7

Figure 7 Daily sperm production per gram of testicular parenchyma based on different germ cell types in the rat, horse, bull and human (from Amann et al., 1976; modified from Johnson, 1986).