The present work was undertaken to
determine the glycoconjugates secreted by the
epithelium of the equine ampulla ductus deferentis,
using conventional (PAS, AB pH 2.5, AB pH 1.0) and
lectin histochemical procedures in conjunction with
enzymatic digestion and chemical treatment. The
presence of abundant apical cytoplasmic blebs suggests
that the equine ampulla secretes its products mainly in
an apocrine manner. Glandular cells secrete neutral and
acidic sialylated glycoconjugates as revealed by
conventional histochemical procedures. Lectin
histochemistry helped us to discover the following
histological positive sites: the mucosal cells, the
glandular epithelial cells, the apical cytoplasmic blebs
and the basal cells. The ampullary secretions contained
both glycoproteic material (revealed by Con-A-, LCA-,
GSA-II-, WGA-, RCA-I- positivity) and sialomucins
(evidenced by the reactivity of GSA-II, SBA, PNA and
RCA-I after sialidase digestion) having different
functional roles. The mucosal cells reacted with Con-A,
LCA, and also with sialidase/GSA-II-, SBA-, PNA-, and
RCA-I sequences, contributing to the chemical heterogeneity of ampullary secretions. DBA lectin was a
specific marker for basal cells.
The results obtained were compared with our
previous findings regarding the differences in the lectin
binding pattern of the plasma-membrane of equine
sperm collected from epididymal cauda and the ampulla
ductis deferentis. Our results support other studies that
indicate that ampullary secretions are involved in
altering the plasma-membrane glycoconjugates of
spermatozoa, contributing to their maturation