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Retinoic acid is dispensable for meiotic initiation but required for spermiogenesis in the mammalian testis

Oleksandr Kirsanov, Taylor A. Johnson, Bryan A. Niedenberger, Taylor N. Malachowski, Benjamin J. Hale, Qing Chen, Brad Lackford, Jiajia Wang, Anukriti Singh, Karen Schindler, Brian P. Hermann, Guang Hu, Christopher B. Geyer

2023Development19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Retinoic acid (RA) is the proposed mammalian 'meiosis inducing substance'. However, evidence for this role comes from studies in the fetal ovary, where germ cell differentiation and meiotic initiation are temporally inseparable. In the postnatal testis, these events are separated by more than 1 week. Exploiting this difference, we discovered that, although RA is required for spermatogonial differentiation, it is dispensable for the subsequent initiation, progression and completion of meiosis. Indeed, in the absence of RA, the meiotic transcriptome program in both differentiating spermatogonia and spermatocytes entering meiosis was largely unaffected. Instead, transcripts encoding factors required during spermiogenesis were aberrant during preleptonema, and the subsequent spermatid morphogenesis program was disrupted such that no sperm were produced. Taken together, these data reveal a RA-independent model for male meiotic initiation.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySpermatidMeiosisRetinoic acidSpermiogenesisCell biologyTranscriptomeGeneticsSpermatogenesisHomologous chromosomeSpermGerm cellGeneGene expressionEndocrinologySperm and Testicular FunctionReproductive Biology and FertilityDNA Repair Mechanisms
Retinoic acid is dispensable for meiotic initiation but required for spermiogenesis in the mammalian testis | Litcius