AUTHOR=Sharma Swati , Sandhowe-Klaverkamp Reinhild , Schlatt Stefan
TITLE=Differentiation of Testis Xenografts in the Prepubertal Marmoset Depends on the Sex and Status of the Mouse Host
JOURNAL=Frontiers in Endocrinology
VOLUME=9
YEAR=2018
URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/endocrinology/articles/10.3389/fendo.2018.00467
DOI=10.3389/fendo.2018.00467
ISSN=1664-2392
ABSTRACT=
This study investigates the effects of the endocrine milieu of immunodeficient mouse host (intact vs. castrated male, intact male vs. intact female) on prepubertal marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) testicular xenografts. Previous marmoset xenografting studies used castrated nude mouse hosts which did not support efficient graft survival and maturation. Due to the distinct endocrine milieu in marmosets with a deletion of exon 10 in the LH receptor, we wanted to explore whether the most efficient xenograft development occurs in intact male mouse hosts compared to intact females or castrated males. We xenografted freshly isolated tissue from prepubertal marmosets (age range 4–6 months) into the back skin of three groups of nude mice (intact male, castrated male, and intact female). We collected serum for endocrine determinations and grafts after 20 weeks and determined hormonal/reproductive status, graft survival, somatic cell development and initiation of germ cell differentiation. Graft development, tubular integrity, and germ cell differentiation status in the grafts retrieved from different hosts was scored by morphometric analysis. The influence of the different endocrine status was compared between groups of hosts. Endocrine readouts and histological endpoints in xenografts substantiate that grafts were exposed to different microenvironments and responded with host specific developmental patterns. The intact male hosts supported the most significant progression of germ cell development. Our data provide evidence for the important role of the host milieu on survival and differentiation of marmoset xenografts. The xenografting model offers innovative avenues to exploit development and endocrine effects in the primate marmoset testis using limited numbers of non-human primates for the experimental settings.