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    Distribution of Zonula Occludens-1 and Occludin and alterations of testicular morphology after in utero radiation and postnatal hyperthermia in rats
    (WILEY, 2012-01-01) Senturk, Gozde Erkanli; Canillioglu, Yasemin Ersoy; Umay, Cenk; Demiralp-Eksioglu, Emel; Ercan, Feriha
    In utero irradiation (IR) and postnatal hyperthermia (HT) exposure cause infertility by decreasing spermatogenic colony growth and the number of sperm in rats. Four groups were used: (i) Control group, (ii) HT group (rats exposed to hyperthermia on the 10th postnatal day), (iii) IR group (rats exposed to IR on the 17th gestational day) and (iv) IR + HT group. Three and six months after the procedures testes were examined by light and electron microscopy. Some degenerated tubules in the HT group, many vacuoles in spermatogenic cells and degenerated tight junctions in the IR group, atrophic tubules and severe degeneration of tight junctions in the IR + HT group were observed. ZO-1 and occludin immunoreactivity were decreased and disorganized in the HT and IR groups and absent in the IR + HT group. The increase in the number of apoptotic cells was accompanied by a time-dependent decrease in haploid, diploid and tetraploid cells in all groups. Degenerative findings were severe after 6 months in all groups. The double-hit model may represent a Sertoli cell only model of infertility due to a decrease in spermatogenic cell and alterated blood-testis barrier proteins in rat.
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    Morphological evaluation of the effects of exercise on high-fat-diet-induced liver damage in rats
    (AVES, 2020-01-01) Elmas, Merve Acikel; Atay, Nilsu; Ozakpinar, Ozlem Bingol; Arbak, Serap; Kolgazi, Meltem; Sener, Goksel; Ercan, Feriha
    Background/Aims: This study was aimed to investigate the protective effects of swimming on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease associated with high-fat-diet-induced obesity using microscopic and biochemical parameters. Materials and Methods: Sprague-Dawley male rats were fed either standard chow (STD group
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    The alterations of blood-testis barrier in experimental testicular injury models
    (MARMARA UNIV, FAC MEDICINE, 2022-01-01) Ercan, Feriha; Acikel Elmas, Merve
    The blood-testis barrier is found between the Sertoli cells and divides the seminiferous tubule epithelium into basal and adluminal compartments. The germinal cell renewal, differentiation and cell cycle progression up to the preleptotene spermotocytes stage take place in the basal compartment, however, meiosis, spermiogenesis and spermiation take place in the adluminal compertment. The blood-testis barrier consists of tight junctions as well as ectoplasmic specialisations, desmosomes and gap junctions to create specific microenvironment for the completion of spermatogenesis to form spermatozoa. The blood-testis barrier is not a static ultrastructure, it undergoes extensive restructuring during the seminiferous tubule epithelial cycle of spermatogenesis to allow the transit of preleptotene spermotocytes at the blood-testis barrier from basal compartment towards the adluminal compartment. The functions of the blood-testis barrier include preventing the transport of biomolecules into the paracellular space, forming an immunological barrier, separating cellular processes during the spermatogenic epithelial cycle, and establishing the cellular polarity of the seminiferous tubule. However, various environmental conditions, chemotherapeutic agents, toxic substances and lifestyle have degenerative effects on blood-testis barrier, resulting in testicular damage, altered sperm parameters and ultimately male infertility. The alterations in morphological and molecular organization of blood-testis barrier in different experimentally induced testis injury models arc reviewed in this article.
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    Ameliorating effects of exercise on disrupted epididymal sperm parameters in high fat diet-induced obese rats
    (MARMARA UNIV, FAC MEDICINE, 2019-01-01) Acikel Elmas, Merve; Arbak, Serap; Ercan, Feriha
    Objective: Obesity causes male infertility problems and affects the sperm quality. Recent studies have shown that exercise has positive effects on male fertility. The present study aimed to show the effects of swimming exercise on the epididymal sperm number, motility and morphology in hight fat diet (HFD)-induced obese rats. Materials and Methods: Four experimental groups (n=8 in each group) were formed. Standard (STD) and STD+Exercise (STD+EXC) groups were fed with standard rat diet (6\% of calories as fat)