Functional assessment of spermatogonial stem cell purity in experimental cell populations

Publication date: May 2018 Source:Stem Cell Research, Volume 29 Author(s): Tessa Lord, Jon M. Oatley Historically, research in spermatogonial biology has been hindered by a lack of validated approaches to identify and isolate pure populations of the various spermatogonial subsets for in-depth analysis. In particular, although a number of markers of the undifferentiated spermatogonial population have now been characterized, standardized methodology for assessing their specificity to the spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) and transit amplifying progenitor pools has been lacking. To date, SSC content within an undefined population of spermatogonia has been inferred using either lineage tracing or spermatogonial transplantation analyses which generate qualitative and quantitative data, respectively. Therefore, these techniques are not directly comparable, and are subject to variable interpretations as to a readout that is representative of a ‘pure’ SSC population. We propose standardization across the field for determining the SSC purity of a population via use of a limiting dilution transplantation assay that would eliminate subjectivity and help to minimize the generation of inconsistent data on ‘SSC’ populations. In the limiting dilution transplantation assay, a population of LacZ-expressing spermatogonia are selected based on a putative SSC marker, and a small, defined number of cells (i.e. 10 cells) are microinjected into the testis of a germ cell-deficient recipient...
Source: Stem Cell Research - Category: Stem Cells Source Type: research