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Capillaries in the lamina propria of human seminiferous tubules are partly fenestrated

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Abstract.

The three capillary parts of the microvasculature of the human testis, namely the arterial side inter-Leydig cell capillaries, the intramural capillaries, and the venous side inter-Leydig cell capillaries, were studied in detail by dual detection of alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity and endothelial marker immunoreactivity, and by means of light- and transmission-electron microscopy. Alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity was seen in intertubular arterioles, capillaries, and venules, and in intramural capillaries of the human testis, whereas the lamina propria of human seminiferous tubules showed no staining. Alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity and the endothelial marker detected by the Qbend 30 antibody co-existed within the endothelial cells of the microvasculature. Electron-microscopically, the endothelial cells of the arterial and venous side inter-Leydig cell capillaries, and of the intertubular capillaries free of Leydig cells were of the continuous type without fenestrations (A-1-α type). The intramural capillaries consisted of non-fenestrated (A-1-α type) and fenestrated sections (A-2-α type). The fenestrations faced the germinal epithelium. Capillaries with a continuous non-fenestrated endothelium contained a large number of transcytotic vesicles and channels. These were numerous in the endothelial cells of the inter-Leydig cell capillaries and the non-fenestrated part of the intramural capillaries. Capillaries partly ran in between the layers of the lamina propria and therefore represented the capillarization of the seminiferous tubules. Thus the multilayered lamina propria probably requires its own capillary supply to allow rapid exchange between the microvasculature and the epithelium of the human seminiferous tubules.

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Received: 7 March 1996 / Accepted: 13 June 1996

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Ergün, S., Davidoff, M. & Holstein, A. Capillaries in the lamina propria of human seminiferous tubules are partly fenestrated. Cell Tissue Res 286, 93–102 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004410050678

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004410050678

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