![]() | ![]() |
Formats:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 Flament et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Lifelong testicular differentiation in Pleurodeles waltl (Amphibia, Caudata) 1EA 3442 Aspects cellulaires et moléculaires de la reproduction et du développement, Nancy-Université, Faculté des Sciences, Boulevard des Aiguillettes, BP 70239, 54506 Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy, France Corresponding author.Stéphane Flament: stephane.flament/at/scbiol.uhp-nancy.fr; Hélène Dumond: helene.dumond/at/scbiol.uhp-nancy.fr; Dominique Chardard: dominique.chardard/at/scbiol.uhp-nancy.fr; Amand Chesnel: amand.chesnel/at/scbiol.uhp-nancy.fr Received December 10, 2008; Accepted March 5, 2009. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract Background In numerous Caudata, the testis is known to differentiate new lobes at adulthood, leading to a multiple testis. The Iberian ribbed newt Pleurodeles waltl has been studied extensively as a model for sex determination and differentiation. However, the evolution of its testis after metamorphosis is poorly documented. Methods Testes were obtained from Pleurodeles waltl of different ages reared in our laboratory. Testis evolution was studied by several approaches: morphology, histology, immunohistochemistry and RT-PCR. Surgery was also employed to study testis regeneration. Results In this species, the testis is linked to the lung. This association consists of connective tissue derived from the mesorchium and the coelomic epithelium surrounding the lung and takes place at the end of larval life. This tissue contains lobules including primordial germ cells with a typical large and polylobular nucleus. The anterior part of the testis remains thin and undifferentiated while the posterior part differentiates in a large first testis lobe where spermatogenesis occurs during the first year of life. The undifferentiated status of the anterior part is attested by the lack of expression of the testis marker Dmrt1 and the meiosis entry marker Dmc1. Three-year-old Pleurodeles waltl possess multiple testes made up of two lobes. The second lobe appears at the caudal extremity of the first one from residual primordial germ cells located near or even inside efferent ducts in the glandular tissue that usually appears following spermatozoa extrusion. Surprisingly, in the case of surgical elimination of the anterior part of the testis, de novo spermatogenesis is stopped in the first lobe which becomes restricted to the glandular tissue. Following first testis lobe removal, the anterior part of the testis regenerates a new testis lobe, a process stimulated in the presence of DHT. Conclusion Pleurodeles waltl constitute an original gonochoristic vertebrate model in which testis differentiation is observed up to adulthood. Background Like in most vertebrate species, ovarian or testis differentiation in amphibians takes place from an undifferentiated bipotential organ. Two areas can be observed in the undifferentiated gonad [1]. At the periphery, the cortex corresponds to the coelomic epithelium colonized by primordial germ cells that originate from an extragonadal region. In the central part of the organ, there is the medulla derived from the mesonephros blastema. The ovary differentiates as an ovisac since germ cells stay in the cortex where they proliferate and together with somatic cells, constitute follicles whereas medulla regression generates a cavity. During testis differentiation, germ cells migrate from the cortex towards the medulla where they associate with Sertoli cells in units named cysts that are themselves included in lobules. The cortex devoid of germ cells becomes albuginea, the testis envelope. In amphibians, as well as in non-mammalian vertebrates, steroids play an important role during gonad differentiation which can be modified by experimental hormonal treatments [2,3]. Indeed, sex reversal occurs following hormonal treatment performed during the hormone-sensitive period: estradiol can induce a complete male to female sex reversal whereas dihydrotestosterone (DHT) induces a female to male sex reversal. Among amphibians, most Caudata are atypical regarding sex differentiation because males possess two multiple testes: at least this is known in Salamandridae and Plethodontidae, two families representing 80% of Salamandroidea [4-18]. This means that in each gonad, several lobes develop successively during adult life. Among Salamandridae, the formation of these lobes has been studied in details in Salamandra salamandra [14]. In this species, the first testis lobe differentiates at the end of metamorphosis. The first typical spermatogenesis is observed during the third year of life: it takes place along the antero-posterior axis of the testis lobe. At the caudal part of the testis, cysts in which spermatozoa are eliminated in the efferent ducts undergo a transformation of their somatic cells: this leads to the formation of the glandular tissue which is a source of steroid hormones [19]. The glandular tissue will disappear and be replaced by small cysts containing primary spermatogonia. After a quiescent period, those cells divide to generate secondary spermatogonia leading to a second differentiated lobe that will appear at the age of 4 years at the caudal part of the testis [14]. In old males of Salamandra, one testis can contain up to 6 lobes. Pleurodeles waltl, the Iberian ribbed newt found in Portugal, Spain and Northwest Africa, is a member of the Salamandridae family. Larvae possess gills and live underwater until they metamorphose into air-breathing forms possessing lungs. Sex is determined genetically (ZZ sex chromosomes in males and ZW in females) and gonad development takes place mainly during larval life (Figure (Figure1)1
Methods Animals Pleurodeles waltl larvae and adults were reared in tap water at 20 ± 2°C. Animals were fed three times a week. For larvae, developmental stages were determined by macroscopic observation according to the Gallien and Durocher development timetable [23]. Sexual genotyping was performed by electrophoretic analysis of peptidase-1 from tail biopsies as described previously [24]. For juvenile and adults, the age of each animal used in the present study was indicated in months or years (post-fertilization). Surgery and DHT treatments A stock solution of benzocaine (Sigma-Aldrich, Saint-Quentin Fallavier, France) was prepared at 3% in absolute ethanol (w/v) and stored at 4°C. Animals were anaesthetized by immersion in water containing 1% (v/v) of this stock solution. For operative procedures (either section between the posterior testis lobe and the undifferentiated anterior part or ablation of the first testis lobe), a 1.5 cm incision was made in the ventrolateral side of the abdomen and the testis was manipulated using sterile fine forceps and scissors. Animals were allowed to recover on moist paper for 24 hours. Then, they were placed in tanks containing 2 l of water supplemented or not with dihydrotestosterone (DHT). A stock solution of DHT was prepared in absolute ethanol (5 mg/ml) and stored at room temperature. For treatment, DHT was used at 400 μg/l whereas control males were exposed to ethanol. The water (with or without treatment) was renewed after each feeding. Several months after surgery, animals were anaesthetized, sacrificed, gonads and lungs were subjected to a morphological examination before histology or molecular biology studies. Histology and Immunohistochemistry Tissues were fixed in Carnoy's solution, embedded in paraffin and sectioned at 7 μm. For histological studies, sections were stained with hematoxylin-eosin-light green. Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen (PCNA) detection was performed using the PC10 monoclonal antibody and the LSAB2 kit (both from Dako, Trappes, France) according to manufacturer's instructions. For BromodeoxyUridine (BrdU) incorporation, BrdU (Sigma-Aldrich) was diluted at 1 mg/ml in Steinberg's solution and 1 ml was used for intraperitoneal injection per juvenile male. After 24 hours, the animals were anaesthetized with benzocaine and testes were harvested and fixed in Carnoy's solution. Once embedded in paraffin and sectioned at 7 μm, BrdU detection was performed using a monoclonal antibody (clone BU 33, Sigma-aldrich, Saint-Quentin Fallavier, France) according to manufacturer's instructions and the LSAB2 kit. Preparations were analysed under white illumination on a Eclipse 80i microscope (Nikon, Champigny sur Marne, France). Images were collected using LuciaG software 4.81 (Laboratory imaging) which was also used to measure morphometric parameters on germ cells as well as testis cross sections. Nuclear parameters were the perimeter and the circularity index (4πarea/perimeter2). When circularity index = 1, nuclei are perfectly round. Cross section parameters were area and circularity index. RT-PCR The testis was separated into three parts: anterior (part linked to the lung), medium (between this anterior part and the first lobe) and posterior (the first differentiated lobe). Total RNA was extracted from each part using 200 μl of TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen Corp., Carlsbad, CA) and quantified. The detailed protocol for reverse transcription has been described previously [25]. Briefly, total RNA (1 μg) was reverse transcribed using hexamer random primers and 100 U Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) in a total volume of 25 μL. A 2 μL aliquot of resultant cDNAs was used for PCR. The amplification was performed with 0.5 U Taq DNA Polymerase (Invitrogen) in PCR buffer containing 25 mM of each deoxynucleotide triphosphate, 1.5 mM MgCl2 and 10 pmol of each primer in a total volume of 25 μL. Specific primers and conditions of amplification for GAPDH (Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase), VASA, DMRT1 (doublesex- and mab-3-related transcription factor 1) and DMC1 (disrupted meiotic cDNA 1) cDNAs have been described previously [22,25]. PCR products were run in a 1% agarose gel containing 0.5 mg/L ethidium bromide. Results Gonads are associated with the lungs We observed that in males, each testis was linked to the lung of the same body side (Figure. (Figure.2a).2a
Testis differentiation is initially restricted to the posterior part of the gonad At the end of larval life (stage 53, 72 dpf), germ cells leave the cortex and invade the medulla all along the cephalo-caudal axis of the gonad which is a long and thin band of tissue. At this early step of gonadal differentiation, testis and ovary can be distinguished only by histological techniques: germ cells are maintained in the cortex of the ovary but they localize in the testis medulla (not shown, see 21). At the end of metamorphosis (stage 56, 169 dpf), a small enlargement appears at the posterior region of the organ: it constitutes the first testis lobe. The longest part of the testis is made up of a long and thin band of tissue that links the first testis lobe to the lung. Between metamorphosis (6 months) and sexual maturity (1.5 – 2 years), the first testis lobe grows while the length of the anterior part of the testis linked to the lung reduces (compare Figure. Figure.2a2a
At the beginning of the first testis lobe, sections showed numerous lobules containing cysts with proliferating germ cells (spermatogonia) with a round nucleus containing condensed chromatin. The cortex was greatly reduced in this region and the somatic cells with small nuclei were absent. The perimeter of the largest region of the first lobe was 10.37 ± 0.17 mm as determined by the analysis of cross sections stained for histology. The first testis lobe was not circular (circularity index = 0.76 ± 0.01), due to the presence of the mesorchium and efferent ducts located in a dorsal hilum. It contained lobules showing an increasing maturity throughout the cephalo-caudal axis: the cephalic part contained proliferating spermatogonia (Figure. (Figure.3b)3b Differential expression of testis markers along the cephalo-caudal axis of the gonad Several molecular markers were studied by RT-PCR in a 9.5-month-old male (Figure. (Figure.5).5
Continuous gonad differentiation leads to multiple testes In two-year-old males, the anterior part of the testis that links the first lobe to the lung was more and more reduced (Figure. (Figure.6a).6a These germ cells seemed to be quiescent up to the third year. At this moment, they become spermatogonia which together with somatic cells will generate a second testis lobe at the caudal extremity of the testis and it appears translucent (Figure. (Figure.7a).7a
The anterior part of the testis differentiates a new testis lobe following partial castration In order to analyse the role of the anterior region of the testis linked to the lung, it was surgically removed from 16-month-old males (n = 3) whereas the first differentiated lobe of the testis was maintained. The experiment was performed on one testis while the other one was preserved. The analyses performed on two males 11 and 13 months respectively after surgery, showed that the operated testis was dramatically reduced in size (length = 5.5 ± 0.4 mm n = 2 males versus 17 ± 0.8 mm for the contralateral testis n = 2 males): it contained mainly the glandular tissue corresponding to lobules after spermatozoa extrusion and there was no further spermatogenesis (Figure. (Figure.8a).8a
In another approach, the first differentiated lobe of the testis was removed while on the contralateral side of the animal, both the differentiated lobe and the anterior part of the testis linked to the lung were removed. When this experiment was performed on 16-month-old males (n = 5), eight months (n = 3) or 15 months (n = 2) after the surgery, a new testis lobe was found near the lung on the side where the anterior part of the testis had been maintained (Figure. (Figure.8c)8c Then we tested if androgens could be involved in the regulation of testis regeneration. Adult males aged between 2 and 3.5-year-old were subjected to bilateral elimination of all the testes except the anterior region linked to the lung. At the time of surgery, 2-year-old males possessed a first lobe with an anterior part containing early spermatogenic stages, a medial part with spermatozoa and a glandular part whereas 3.5-year-old males possessed the first lobe and the beginning of a second one developing caudally (see Figure Figure7a).7a
Discussion Gonads linked to the lungs In Pleurodeles waltl, gonads (testes and ovaries) are associated with the lungs. Lungs are paired ventral derivatives of the foregut and their development depends on interactive signalling between the endodermal epithelium and mesenchyme derived from splanchnic mesoderm [26-28]. Gonads arise caudally as a thickening along the ventromedial side of the mesonephros. Thus, lungs and gonads show different development process, localization and function and they are never associated. This is obvious in mammals where the diaphragm separates the rib cage containing lungs and the abdomen containing gonads but this is also observed in birds and reptiles which do not possess a diaphragm, as well as in anuran amphibians like frogs or toads that do not have a rib cage. The presence of a link between gonads and lungs cannot exist in Plethodontids that are lungless salamanders. Such a link has not been described in studies about testis development or spermatogenesis in Pleurodeles waltl although the presence of primordial germ cells at the anterior part of the testis is well known [29,30]. This link has not been described in any other Caudata species [18]. Studies on lung development in Caudata also do not describe any association with the gonads. We have had the opportunity to study two other male urodele amphibians from histological sections available in the laboratory: Ambystoma mexicanum (Ambystomatidae) and Ichthyosaura (= Mesotriton = Triturus) alpestris (Salamandridae). In neotenic larvae of Ambystoma mexicanum, the lungs display more compartments than those of Pleurodeles waltl whereas Ichthyosaura alpestris possesses smooth-surfaced lungs [31,32]. Our observations indicate that a connective link between lung and testis is also observed in both species but it does not contain germ cells as described in Pleurodeles waltl. We found only one sentence in a short report about Triturus cristatus: "In case of bilateral castration a few islands of germ cells intimately linked to the lung or to the kidney cannot be extirpated" [33]. This suggests that the presence of germ cells in the link between gonad and lung might be restricted to a few species, but a detailed study of other species is required to get more information. Regionalized differentiation of the testis The second interesting finding reported in our study is the fact that testis differentiation in Pleurodeles waltl is regionalized. Although the migration of the germ cells from the cortex towards the medulla occurs all along the cephalo-caudal axis of the testis, in juvenile animals, the differentiation will appear first in the posterior region that evolves in a first testis lobe where spermatogenesis will take place. Our results show clearly that in the anterior part of the testis, germ cells have the morphological features of primordial germ cells (large polylobular nucleus) rather than those of spermatogonia (round nucleus). This is consistent with previous reports on Pleurodeles waltl indicating the presence of primordial germ cells at the anterior part of the testis [30]. After a 24 hour exposure to BrdU, these cells have not incorporated the thymidine analogue whereas it was incorporated in somatic cells in the same area and in numerous spermatogonia in the first testis lobe. These germ cells located in the anterior part of the testis linked to the lung are not out of the cell cycle since they express PCNA. Thus, they just do not proliferate actively. This regionalization is not a unique feature of this animal since histological studies have shown in numerous Caudata that the cephalic part of a testis lobe contains primordial germ cells whereas the caudal part contains spermatozoa. In other amphibians, these regions are sometimes named the immature and mature parts respectively [14,34,35]. Such a regionalization is very interesting for the study of spermatogenesis and its regulation [35,36]. Nevertheless, the molecular markers analyzed in our study to better characterize testis differentiation status have been used only in a few species. Germ cells in the anterior part of the testis have not entered meiosis as confirmed by the absence of expression of the recombinase Dmc1 [37]. In the newt Cynops pyrrhogaster, Dmc1 expression was found to be absent from spermatogonia whereas the maximal expression was observed in primary spermatocytes at the leptotene-zygotene stage [38]. Despite the presence of surrounding somatic cells and differentiated efferent ducts, this part of the testis does not express the testis specific marker Dmrt1 [20]. The number of germ cells and the differentiated status of the testis increase along the cephalo-caudal axis from the lung to the first differentiated lobe. It has been demonstrated recently that retinoic acid was involved in meiosis entry in mammals [39]. Although the evidence of a similar process in amphibians has not yet been reported, it might be interesting to determine why these cells in the anterior part of the testis do not respond to signals triggering meiosis entry (perhaps retinoic acid) whereas most posterior germ cells do. Undifferentiated part of the testis and spermatogenesis We have shown that the first testis lobe is reduced to glandular tissue when the first differentiated lobe is separated from the anterior part of the testis. This demonstrates clearly that the undifferentiated part of the testis near the lung is a source of germ cells which enter progressively into the first testis lobe together with somatic cells to constitute lobules and cysts. This is in accordance with the well known increasing maturity of the lobules throughout the cephalo-caudal axis of the testis [30]. This is also in agreement with the idea that in Caudata, each annual recrudescence of spermatogenetic activity arises from the primordial tissue in the testicular cords at the anterior end of each lobe [18]. Thus, lobules in the testis of Caudata are transient structures that are replaced with new generations of lobules after sperm liberation (spermiation). The high potency of the anterior part of the testis linked to the lung to differentiate new testicular structures has been demonstrated in our study by the elimination of the first differentiated testis lobe, triggering the formation of a new testis lobe in which a complete spermatogenesis can occur. A similar result was obtained in Cynops pyrrhogaster and Triturus cristatus and described as testis regeneration [11,33]. In the experiments performed in Triturus cristatus, regenerates were studied up to 21 months after the bilateral castration and several oocytes could be found in the gonad [33]. In our study, animals were not reared more than 15 months post-castration, but we did not observe oocytes on histological sections and there was no intersexuality. The regenerating process appeared slower in older males (2- to 3.5-year-old instead of 16-month-old). However, this slower process allowed us to show very clearly a stimulation by DHT when added to the rearing water. This suggests that in vivo changes in steroid synthesis could be associated not only to testis regeneration but also to lifelong testis differentiation. However, little is known about androgen synthesis in Pleurodeles waltl. A measure of sex steroid levels in the plasma by radio-immunoassay showed two annual peaks in october-november and in march with testosterone being the major steroid in addition to DHT and androstenedione [40]. However, this study showed individual fluctuations and the age of the males is unknown (the author just indicates the use of "sexually mature males"). The author also reports that in contrast to testosterone, the levels of DHT are essentially unaffected by castration: 60 to 100% of initial DHT levels versus 0.7 to 7% of initial testosterone levels were found 11 days post-castration [40]. Together with the fact that DHT was present only at very low concentrations in the testis [41], this result suggests that DHT could be produced from an organ other than the testis. This is consistent with our finding showing that DHT can stimulate the differentiation of new testicular structures even after removal of the first testis lobe. The fact that DHT stimulates testis regeneration is in agreement with data from the Japanese red-bellied newt in which plasma DHT levels peak at the resumption of spermatogenesis [42]. Of course we cannot exclude that in addition to DHT, other factors play a part in the differentiation of a new testis lobe. For instance follicle-stimulating hormone and epidermal growth factor have been shown to regulate spermatogonial proliferation in the newt Cynops pyrrhogaster [35,43]. The multiple testes Our study also shows that in Pleurodeles waltl, males possess multiple testes. Such an organ is a common feature of most Caudata belonging to the Salamandroidea order. Among the Salamandridae family, it was described for instance in various genus of the Pleurodelinae subfamily (Triturus cristatus, Ichthyosaura alpestris, Lissotriton helveticus (= Triturus palmatus) [5,6], Triturus marmoratus [44], Notophthalmus (= Diemyctylus) viridescens, Taricha torosa (= Diemyctylus torosus = Triturus torosus) [7,12], Cynops pyrrhogaster [11], Euproctus platycephalus (= rusconi), Tylotriton verrucosus and Calotriton (= Euproctus) asper [15] as well as in the Salamandrinae subfamily (Salamandra salamandra (= maculata) [5,14]. Multiple testes are also present in the Plethodontidae family, both in the desmognathinae (Desmognathus fuscus [7,13], D. monticola, D. ochrophaeus and D. quadramaculatus [17]) and the Plethodontinae subfamilies (Eurycea bislineata [16], Chiropterotriton mosaueri [45]). A similar testis structure seems also to exist in the Gymnophiona Ichthyophis tricolor and Uraeotyphlus cf. narayani [46]. In Pleurodeles waltl, the way of formation of the new testis lobe which appears at the posterior extremity of a previous one, seems to be identical to what has been described in Salamandra salamandra [14] or in Desmognathus fusca [7]. The germ cells of the new lobe are derived from primordial germ cells located in the glandular tissue at the posterior end of the preexisting lobe. In the glandular tissue of Pleurodeles waltl, we found primordial germ cells in the connective tissue surrounding efferent ducts and sometimes in the lumen of those ducts. This observation confirms previous reports [30,47]. However, in the part of Pleurodeles waltl testis containing cysts with spermatozoa, we observed rarely primordial germ cells. The hypothesis of a migration along the efferent ducts from the anterior part of the testis is interesting but we could not test it. However, germ cells could also have another origin. Indeed, from experiments using estradiol benzoate treatment of adult males of Cynops pyrrhogaster, it has been proposed that germ cells could differentiate from the columnar epithelium surrounding the slender cords which connect testis lobes [48]. We have no information about the origin of somatic cells in the new testis lobe of Pleurodeles waltl. It has been proposed that in the early glandular tissue, after spermiation, Sertoli cells degenerate and they could differentiate into duct cells. This is suggested by the presence of a common basal lamina [49] and the expression of the WT1 gene [50]. The fact that Sertoli cells and duct cells have similar lectin-labeling patterns is also in agreement with a common origin for Sertoli cells and duct cells [30,47]. Besides, the factors that trigger the formation of a new lobe are unknown although androgens seem to be good candidates as suggested from our castration experiments. Conclusion Like other Caudata, Pleurodeles waltl constitutes an original gonochoristic vertebrate model in which testis differentiation is observed up to adulthood. Indeed, the differentiation of gonads at adulthood occurs mainly in hermaphroditic teleost fish which are either protandrous (e.g; gilthead seabream) or protogynous (e.g. honeycomb grouper) [51,52]. Pleurodeles waltl might be used for the study of factors required to maintain primordial germ cells in adults as well as factors triggering their differentiation. This could shed light on the highly debated recent finding of germline stem cells in the mammalian ovary [53]. Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests. Authors' contributions SF designed the study, performed surgical experiments, organ collection, analyzed histological sections and drafted the manuscript. HD realized molecular biology analyses. DC performed steroid treatments and contributed to histological analysis. AC obtained data about molecular tools and critically reviewed the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Acknowledgements We would like to thank M. Chillet, A. Kleinclauss and E. Bouvry for animal rearing and especially M. Chillet for excellent technical assistance in histology. We thank also Professor Simon Thornton for reading the manuscript. This work was performed using materials obtained with grants from the Ligue Contre le Cancer (Comités de la Meurthe et Moselle, de la Meuse et de la Haute-Marne), of the Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer, of the Conseil Régional de Lorraine and of the Université Henri Poincaré. References
|
PubMed related articles
Your browsing activity is empty. Activity recording is turned off. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||
J Exp Zool. 1998 Aug 1; 281(5):373-99.
[J Exp Zool. 1998]Cell Mol Life Sci. 1999 Jun; 55(6-7):901-9.
[Cell Mol Life Sci. 1999]Cytogenet Genome Res. 2003; 101(3-4):283-8.
[Cytogenet Genome Res. 2003]Cytogenet Genome Res. 2003; 101(3-4):283-8.
[Cytogenet Genome Res. 2003]Sex Dev. 2008; 2(2):104-14.
[Sex Dev. 2008]Mol Reprod Dev. 2008 Mar; 75(3):439-49.
[Mol Reprod Dev. 2008]Reprod Nutr Dev. 1988; 28(4A):979-87.
[Reprod Nutr Dev. 1988]J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2003 Jan; 84(1):89-100.
[J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2003]Mol Reprod Dev. 2008 Mar; 75(3):439-49.
[Mol Reprod Dev. 2008]J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2003 Jan; 84(1):89-100.
[J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2003]Curr Opin Genet Dev. 1998 Aug; 8(4):481-6.
[Curr Opin Genet Dev. 1998]Microsc Res Tech. 2004 May 1; 64(1):63-76.
[Microsc Res Tech. 2004]Cell Tissue Res. 1980; 205(1):133-45.
[Cell Tissue Res. 1980]Anat Rec. 1989 Oct; 225(2):139-49.
[Anat Rec. 1989]Microsc Res Tech. 2004 May 1; 64(1):63-76.
[Microsc Res Tech. 2004]Reprod Biol Endocrinol. 2008 Jan 11; 6():1.
[Reprod Biol Endocrinol. 2008]Zoolog Sci. 2004 Jul; 21(7):691-704.
[Zoolog Sci. 2004]Mol Cell. 1998 Apr; 1(5):697-705.
[Mol Cell. 1998]Dev Growth Differ. 2000 Dec; 42(6):603-11.
[Dev Growth Differ. 2000]Microsc Res Tech. 2004 May 1; 64(1):63-76.
[Microsc Res Tech. 2004]Gen Comp Endocrinol. 1985 Jun; 58(3):376-85.
[Gen Comp Endocrinol. 1985]Endocrinol Jpn. 1983 Feb; 30(1):1-6.
[Endocrinol Jpn. 1983]Reprod Biol Endocrinol. 2008 Jan 11; 6():1.
[Reprod Biol Endocrinol. 2008]Int J Dev Biol. 1994 Jun; 38(2):201-8.
[Int J Dev Biol. 1994]J Anat. 1989 Dec; 167():85-94.
[J Anat. 1989]J Morphol. 2004 Jul; 261(1):92-104.
[J Morphol. 2004]Microsc Res Tech. 2004 May 1; 64(1):63-76.
[Microsc Res Tech. 2004]Histochem J. 2000 Dec; 32(12):717-24.
[Histochem J. 2000]Z Mikrosk Anat Forsch. 1982; 96(2):221-34.
[Z Mikrosk Anat Forsch. 1982]Dev Dyn. 1996 Dec; 207(4):372-81.
[Dev Dyn. 1996]Microsc Res Tech. 2004 May 1; 64(1):63-76.
[Microsc Res Tech. 2004]Histochem J. 2000 Dec; 32(12):717-24.
[Histochem J. 2000]Horm Behav. 2003 Jan; 43(1):31-8.
[Horm Behav. 2003]Nature. 2004 Mar 11; 428(6979):145-50.
[Nature. 2004]