Back to Search Start Over

Calcium transport in male reproduction is possibly influenced by vitamin D and CaSR

Authors :
Rune Holt
Martin Blomberg Jensen
Mette Lorenzen
Geert Carmeliet
Ida Marie Boisen
John E Nielsen
Lieve Verlinden
Beate Lanske
Christine Hjorth Andreassen
Anja Pinborg
Anders Juul
Source :
Journal of Endocrinology. 251:207-222
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Bioscientifica, 2021.

Abstract

Vitamin D is important for gonadal function in rodents, and improvement of vitamin D status in men with low sperm counts increases live birth rate. Vitamin D is a regulator of transcellular calcium transport in the intestine and kidney and may influence the dramatic changes in the luminal calcium concentration in epididymis. Here, we show spatial expression in the male reproductive tract of vitamin D receptor (VDR)-regulated factors involved in calcium transport: transient receptor potential vanilloid 5/6 , sodium/calcium exchanger 1, plasma membrane calcium ATPase 1, calbindin D9k, calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR), and parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) in mouse and human testis and epididymis. Testicular Casr expression was lower in Vdr ablated mice compared with controls. Moreover, expression levels of Casr and Pthrp were strongly correlated in both testis and epididymis and Pthrp was suppressed by 1,25(OH)2D3 in a spermatogonial cell line. The expression of CaSR in epididymis may be of greater importance than in the gonad in mice as germ cell-specific Casr deficient mice had no major reproductive phenotype, and coincubation with a CaSR-agonist had no effect on human sperm–oocyte binding. In humans, seminal calcium concentration between 5 and 10 mM was associated with a higher fraction of motile and morphologically normal sperm cells, and the seminal calcium concentration was not associated with serum calcium levels. In conclusion, VDR regulates CaSR and PTHrP, and both factors may be involved in the regulation of calcium transport in the male reproductive tract with possible implications for sperm function and storage.

Details

ISSN :
14796805 and 00220795
Volume :
251
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Endocrinology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....683c2160f1d1c53a68517805b9aca40b