Computer simulations of the mouse spermatogenic cycle
Authored by Debjit Ray, Philip B Pitts, Cathryn A Hogarth, Leanne S Whitmore, Michael D Griswold, Ping Ye
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1242/bio.20149068
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The spermatogenic cycle describes the periodic development of germ cells
in the testicular tissue. The temporal-spatial dynamics of the cycle
highlight the unique, complex, and interdependent interaction between
germ and somatic cells, and are the key to continual sperm production.
Although understanding the spermatogenic cycle has important clinical
relevance for male fertility and contraception, there are a number of
experimental obstacles. For example, the lengthy process cannot be
visualized through dynamic imaging, and the precise action of germ cells
that leads to the emergence of testicular morphology remains
uncharacterized. Here, we report an agent-based model that simulates the
mouse spermatogenic cycle on a cross-section of the seminiferous tubule
over a time scale of hours to years, while considering feedback
regulation, mitotic and meiotic division, differentiation, apoptosis, and movement. The computer model is able to elaborate the germ cell
dynamics in a time-lapse movie format, allowing us to trace individual
cells as they change state and location. More importantly, the model
provides mechanistic understanding of the fundamentals of male
fertility, namely how testicular morphology and sperm production are
achieved. By manipulating cellular behaviors either individually or
collectively in silico, the model predicts causal events for the altered
arrangement of germ cells upon genetic or environmental perturbations.
This in silico platform can serve as an interactive tool to perform
long-term simulation and to identify optimal approaches for infertility
treatment and contraceptive development.
Tags
Stem-cells
Seminiferous epithelium
Retinoic acid
Vitamin-a
Cell behaviors
Germ-cells
In-vivo
Mice
Testis
Duration