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1.
Amplification of the genes coding for ribosomal RNA oocurs in the oocytes of a wide variety of organisms. In oocytes of various species of crickets (Orthoptera: Gryllidae) the amplified DNA is contained in a large extrachromosomal DNA body. Multiple nucleoli form about the periphery of the DNA body during the diplotene stage of meiosis I. In contrast to the general pattern of orthopteran oocytes, oocytes of the cockroach Blattella germanica demonstrate a single large nucleolus instead of many nucleoli. In order to determine whether the genes coding for rRNA are amplified in the oocytes of B. germanica, the relative amount of rDNA in oocytes was compared with the rDNA content of spermatocytes and somatic cells. An extrachromosomal DNA body similar to that present in crickets is not present in B. germanica. A satellite DNA band which contains nucleotide sequences complementary to rRNA accounts for approximately 3-5% of the total DNA in somatic and in male and female gametogenic tissues. Female cells contain approximately twice as much rDNA as do male cells. An XX-XO sex-determining mechanism is operative in B. germanica. In situ hybridization with rRNA indicates that the nucleolar organizer is located on one end of the X chromosome and that oocytes do not contain more than twice the amount of rDNA found in spermato cytes. The data indicate that rDNA is not amplified in the uninucleolate oocyte of B germanica.  相似文献   

2.
At a time in the life cycle when a large proportion of the oocytes of Acheta incorporate 3H-thymidine into an extrachromosomal DNA body, synthesis of a satellite or minor band DNA, the density of which is greater than main band DNA, is readily detected. Synthesis of the satellite DNA is not detectable in tissues, the cells of which do not have a DNA body, or in ovaries in which synthesis of extrachromosomal DNA by the oocytes is completed. The DNA body contains the amplified genes which code for ribosomal RNA. However, less than 1 percent of the satellite DNA, all of which appears to be amplified in the oocyte, is complementary to ribosomal 18S and 28S RNA. In situ hybridization demonstrates that non-ribosomal elements, like the ribosomal elements of the satellite DNA, are localized in the DNA body.Abbreviations used rRNA ribosomal RNA, includes 18S and 28S RNA - rDNA gene sequences complementary to rRNA - cRNA complementary RNA synthesized in vitro  相似文献   

3.
In Hirudo medicinalis and Haemopis sanguisuga, two convoluted ovary cords are found within each ovary. Each ovary cord is a polarized structure composed of germ cells (oogonia, developing oocytes, nurse cells) and somatic cells (apical cell, follicular cells). One end of the ovary cord is club-shaped and comprises one huge apical cell, numerous oogonia, and small cysts (clusters) of interconnected germ cells. The main part of the cord contains fully developed cysts composed of numerous nurse cells connected via intercellular bridges with the cytophore, which in turn is connected by a cytoplasmic bridge with the growing oocyte. The opposite end of the cord degenerates. Cord integrity is ensured by flattened follicular cells enveloping the cord; moreover, inside the cord, some follicular cells (internal follicular cells) are distributed among germ cells. As oogenesis progresses, the growing oocytes gradually protrude into the ovary lumen; as a result, fully developed oocytes arrested in meiotic metaphase I float freely in the ovary lumen. This paper describes the successive stages of oogenesis of H. medicinalis in detail. Ovary organization in Hirudinea was classified within four different types: non-polarized ovary cords were found in glossiphoniids, egg follicles were described in piscicolids, ovarian bodies were found characteristic for erpobdellids, and polarized ovary cords in hirudiniforms. Ovaries with polarized structures equipped with apical cell (i.e. polarized ovary cords and ovarian bodies) (as found in arhynchobdellids) are considered as primary for Hirudinea while non-polarized ovary cords and the occurrence of egg follicles (rhynchobdellids) represent derived condition.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The development of the telotrophic ovary in the Staphylinid beetle,Creophilus maxillosus was examined. Cells, termed chordoblasts were identified in the germarium of 1-day-old pupae. Each of the chordoblasts undergoes a series of synchronous mitoses. Owing to the precise control of the cleavage plane, which is vertical to the long axis of the ovariole, each of the chordoblasts gives rise to a linear chain of sibling chordocytes. Extra DNA synthesis within each sibling string is usually limited to the most posterior chordocyte only, this being an oocyte progenitor.Divisions of the oocyte progenitor are differential mitoses in which the extra DNA material is transported preferentially towards the posterior pole of the spindle. As extra DNA synthesis and preferential segregation of this material result in gradual increase of this DNA in the nuclei of oocyte progenitors, cytokinesis of these cells becomes highly unequal, the larger of the two cells produced at each differential mitosis being as a rule the posterior cell, i.e. the oocyte progenitor of the next cell generation. As a resul of the series of differential mitoses each chordoblast gives rise to a number of nurse cells and only one definitive oocyte.It is suggested that somatic prefollicular tissue plays a decisive role in oocyte determination in the Coleopteran telotrophic ovary.This word was supported in part under Contract DPKBN/52/76-II. 1. 3. 10. with the Polish Academy of Science  相似文献   

5.
6.
Qualitative studies on the in vitro uptake and incorporation of tritiated uridine into RNA of the somatic and germinal elements of the starfish ovary were carried out prior to and during hormone-induced oocyte maturation and spawning.Autoradiography of nonhormone-treated ovaries indicated that the outer ovarian wall contained the highest concentration of label, with lesser amounts in the follicle cells and least in the oocytes. Oocytes and follicle cells localized at the periphery of the ovary were labeled first, and both cells became progressively labeled throughout the ovary with time; the label first appeared localized in the nucleolus of the oocyte.Sucrose gradient analysis of the separated cellular components of prelabeled hormone-treated ovaries indicated that RNA synthesis occurred in all segments of the ovary and that the spawned oocyte fraction was the least active. Synthesis of ribosomal RNA was detectable after a lag period of approximately 4 hr. Oocytes incubated in 3H-uridine during and subsequent to 1-methyladenine-induced spawning and maturation synthesized 15–19 S and low molecular weight RNA but not ribosomal RNA. Synthesis of the 15–19 S RNA was inhibited with ethidium bromide and to a limited extent by actinomycin D. Isolated mitochondrial fractions contained most of the labeled 15–19 S RNA. These data suggest the mitochondrial origin of most, if not all, of this intermediate-weight RNA. On the basis of these studies, it appears that starfish oocytes and follicle cells are metabolically active at the transitional period from growth to maturational stages in oocytes. Synthesis of RNA furthermore apparently continues in the cytoplasm subsequent to germinal vesicle breakdown and spawning.  相似文献   

7.
Gene amplification in the oocytes of dytiscid water beetles   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
A conspicuous mass of extrachromosomal DNA (Giardina's body) is found in oogonia and oocytes of Dytiscid water beetles. Since in older oocytes this DNA is associated with numerous nucleoli, it seemed probable that the ovary might contain extra copies of the genes for ribosomal RNA (rRNA). This hypothesis has been confirmed by centrifugation and molecular hybridization studies. —In Dytiscus marginalis and Colymbetes fuscus a high density satellite DNA is found in somatic cells and in sperm. Hybridization experiments show that all of the rDNA, i.e., those sequences complementary to rRNA, are located in this satellite, although quantitatively they make up only a small fraction of the satellite. In both species the DNA isolated from ovariole tips is enriched with respect to the satellite. A parallel enrichment of the rDNA has been shown in ovariole tips of Colymbetes, but for technical reasons has not been examined in Dytiscus. —The following model is proposed. In somatic cells and sperm the rDNA is part of an extensive region of high density DNA in one or more chromosomes. In oogonia and oocytes the entire high density region is replicated extrachromosomally and appears cytologically as Giardina's body.  相似文献   

8.
Some histological details of the adult ovary of Hyleoglomeris japonica are described for the first time in the glomerid diplopods. The ovary is a single, long sac-like organ extending from the 4th to the 12th body segment along the median body axis, lying between the alimentary canal and the ventral nerve cord. The ovarian wall consists of a layer of thin ovarian epithelium which surrounds a wide ovarian lumen. A pair of longitudinal “germ zones,” including female germ cells, runs in the lateral ovarian wall. Each germ zone consists of two types of oogenetic areas: 1) 8–12 narrow patch-shaped areas for oogonial proliferation, arranged metamerically in a row along each of the dorsal and ventral peripheries, and 2) the remaining wide area for oocyte growth. Oogonial proliferation areas include oogonia, very early previtellogenic oocytes, and young somatic interstitial cells, among the ovarian epithelial cells. The larger early previtellogenic oocytes in the oogonial proliferation areas are located nearer to the oocyte growth area, and migrate to the oocyte growth area. They are surrounded by a layer of follicle cells and are connected with the ovarian epithelium of the oocyte growth area by a portion of their follicles. They grow into the ovarian lumen, but their follicles are still connected with the oocyte growth area. Various sizes of the previtellogenic and vitellogenic oocytes in the ovarian lumen are connected with the oocyte growth area; the smaller oocytes are connected nearer to the dorsal and ventral oogonial proliferation areas, while the larger ones are connected nearer to the longitudinal middle line of the oocyte growth area. Following the completion of vitellogenesis and egg membrane formation in the largest primary oocytes, the germinal vesicles break down. Ripe oocytes are released from their follicles directly into the ovarian lumen to be transported into the oviducts. Ovarian structure and oogenesis of H. japonica are very similar to those of other chilognathan diplopods. At the same time, however, some characteristic features of the ovary of H. japonica are helpful for understanding the structure and evolution of the diplopod ovaries. Some aspects of the phylogenetic significance in the paired germ zones of H. japonica are discussed. J. Morphol 231:277–285, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Pseudoscorpion females carry fertilized eggs and embryos in specialized brood sacs, where embryos are fed with a nutritive fluid produced and secreted by somatic ovarian cells. We used various microscopic techniques to analyze the organization of the somatic cells in the ovary of a pseudoscorpion, Chelifer cancroides. In young specimens, the ovary is a cylindrical mass of internally located germline cells (oogonia and early previtellogenic oocytes) and two types of somatic cells: the epithelial cells of the ovarian wall and the internal interstitial cells. In subsequent stages of the ovary development, the oocytes grow and protrude from the ovary into the hemocoel (opisthosomal cavity). At the same time the interstitial cells differentiate into the follicular cells that directly cover the oocyte surface, whereas some epithelial cells of the ovarian wall form the oocyte stalks – tubular structures that connect the oocytes with the ovarian tube. The follicular cells do not seem to participate in oogenesis. In contrast, the cells of the stalk presumably have a dual function. During ovulation the stalk cells appear to contribute to the formation of the external egg envelope (chorion), while in the post-ovulatory phase of ovary function they cooperate with the other cells of the ovarian wall in the production of the nutritive fluid for the developing embryos.  相似文献   

10.
The in vitro effects of 2-4-dinitrophenol (DNP) on spawning and follicular and oocyte maturation in starfish ovaries and its various cellular components were investigated. Spawning and oocyte and follicular maturation induced by starfish gonadotropin radial nerve factor (RNF) in isolated ovarian fragments were all inhibited by appropriate doses of DNP. DNP inhibits processes which occur shortly after addition of the gonadotropin; in ovarian fragments insensitivity to DNP inhibition occurred shortly after addition of RNF but prior to initiation of spawning. Spontaneous follicular and oocyte maturation which occurred following release of ovarian follicles into sea water was prevented by DNP. In non-spontaneously maturing follicles released from the ovary, DNP inhibited both follicle and oocyte maturation induced by the secondary stimulator of spawning and maturation, 1-methyladenine (1-MA). DNP also inhibited 1-MA induced meiotic maturation in isolated immature oocytes incubated in the absence of follicle cells. Inhibition of oocyte maturation was not associated with inhibition of 3H-1-MA incorporation by isolated oocytes. Immature oocytes incubated in the presence of DNP underwent maturation following washing and subsequent exposure to 1-MA. Immature oocytes initially exposed to both 1-MA and DNP, however, showed decreased maturation responsiveness following washing and re-exposure to 1-MA. The results suggest that the inhibitory effects of DNP on spawning and oocyte maturation are the result of direct effects on the oocytes and possibly other cells and tissues within the ovary.  相似文献   

11.
The in vitro effects of 2-4-dinitrophenol (DNP) on spawning and follicular and oocyte maturation in starfish ovaries and its various cellular components were investigated. Spawning and oocyte and follicular maturation induced by starfish gonadotropin radial nerve factor (RNF) in isolated ovarian fragments were all inhibited by appropriate doses of DNP. DNP inhibits processes which occur shortly after addition of the gonadotropin; in ovarian fragments insensitivity to DNP inhibition occurred shortly after addition of RNF but prior to initiation of spawning. Spontaneous follicular and oocyte maturation which occurred following release of ovarian follicles into sea water was prevented by DNP. In non-spontaneously maturing follicles released from the ovary, DNP inhibited both follicle and oocyte maturation induced by the secondary stimulator of spawning and maturation, 1-methyladenine (1-MA). DNP also inhibited 1-MA induced meiotic maturation in isolated immature oocytes incubated in the absence of follicle cells. Inhibition of oocyte maturation was not associated with inhibition of 3H-1-MA incorporation by isolated oocytes. Immature oocytes incubated in the presence of DNP underwent maturation following washing and subsequent exposure to 1-MA. Immature oocytes initially exposed to both 1-MA and DNP, however, showed decreased maturation responsiveness following washing and re-exposure to 1-MA. The results suggest that the inhibitory effects of DNP on spawning and oocyte maturation are the result of direct effects on the oocytes and possibly other cells and tissues within the ovary.  相似文献   

12.
It has been suggested that Locusta migratoria amplifies its ribosomal RNA genes in the growing oocytes (Kunz (1967) Chromosoma20, 332–370). Cloned ribosomal DNA of L. migratoria was used to analyze rDNA structure and number. The rDNA is localized on three chromosome pairs in six nucleolus organizers. It was found that all structural variants of the rRNA genes which have been described previously are represented in the same relative amounts in DNA from isolated oocytes as in somatic cells. Furthermore, the rRNA gene number is not increased in oocyte DNA, i.e., amplification does not occur. Therefore, the large number of multiple nucleoli seen in the growing oocytes has to be interpreted as the fully extended and fully active set of chromosomal rRNA genes. The total rRNA gene number was determined by dot blot hybridization to be about 3300 genes/haploid genome.  相似文献   

13.
Amplification of the genes coding for rRNA occurs in the oocytes of a wide variety of organisms. The amplification process appears to be mediated through a rolling-circle mechanism. The approximate molecular weight of the smallest rDNA circles is equivalent to the estimated combined molecular weight of DNA which codes for a single ribosomal RNA precursor molecule and an associated non-transcribed spacer DNA sequence. RNA-DNA hybridization studies carried out on oocytes of the house cricket, Acheta domesticus, suggest that DNA coding for rRNA accounts for only a small fraction of the rDNA satellite, all of which is amplified in the oocyte. In order to test the possibility that the remainder of the amplified rDNA represents spacer and to determine whether a rolling-circle mechanism might also be involved in amplification in A. domesticus oocytes, rDNA was isolated from ovaries of A. domesticus and spread for electron microscopy. A large proportion of the rDNA isolated from ovaries is circular, while main-band DNA and rDNA prepared from other tissues demonstrates few if any circles. The mean size of the smallest rDNA circles is approximately 8 times longer than the length estimated for DNA which codes for 18 S and 28 S rRNA. Denaturation mapping shows the rDNA circles to contain two major readily denaturing regions located about equidistant from one another on the circle. Each readily denaturing region accounts for 4–6% of the total DNA in the circle. The fact that only 12% of the average molecule is required to code for A. domesticus 18 S and 28 S rRNA is consistent with the hybridization data. Considerable size heterogeneity exists in the length of the smallest class of rDNA molecules. In the rDNA of other species such heterogeneity has been shown to reside in the non-transcribed spacer.  相似文献   

14.
Primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) is one of the many unintended consequences of chemotherapy faced by the growing number of female cancer survivors. While ovarian repercussions of chemotherapy have long been recognized, the acute insult phase and primary sites of damage are not well-studied, hampering efforts to design effective intervention therapies to protect the ovary. Utilizing doxorubicin (DXR) as a model chemotherapy agent, we defined the acute timeline for drug accumulation, induced DNA damage, and subsequent cellular and follicular demise in the mouse ovary. DXR accumulated first in the core ovarian stroma cells, then redistributed outwards into the cortex and follicles in a time-dependent manner, without further increase in total ovarian drug levels after four hours post-injection. Consistent with early drug accumulation and intimate interactions with the blood supply, stroma cell-enriched populations exhibited an earlier DNA damage response (measurable at 2 hours) than granulosa cells (measurable at 4 hours), as quantified by the comet assay. Granulosa cell-enriched populations were more sensitive however, responding with greater levels of DNA damage. The oocyte DNA damage response was delayed, and not measurable above background until 10-12 hours post-DXR injection. By 8 hours post-DXR injection and prior to the oocyte DNA damage response, the number of primary, secondary, and antral follicles exhibiting TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling)-positive granulosa cells plateaued, indicating late-stage apoptosis and suggesting damage to the oocytes is subsequent to somatic cell failure. Primordial follicles accumulate significant DXR by 4 hours post-injection, but do not exhibit TUNEL-positive granulosa cells until 48 hours post-injection, indicating delayed demise. Taken together, the data suggest effective intervention therapies designed to protect the ovary from chemotherapy accumulation and induced insult in the ovary must act almost immediately to prevent acute insult as significant damage was seen in stroma cells within the first two hours.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract. Ovarian ultrastructure and oogenesis in two pycnogonid species, Cilunculus armatus and Ammothella biunguiculata , were investigated. The ovary is morphologically and functionally divided into trunk and pedal parts. The former represents the germarium and contains very young germ cells in a pachytene or postpachytene phase, whereas the latter houses developing previtellogenic and vitellogenic oocytes and represents the vitellarium. Intercellular bridges were occasionally found between young (trunk) germ cells. This indicates that in pycnogonids, as in other animal groups, at the onset of oogenesis clusters of germ cells are generated. As nurse cells are absent in the ovaries of investigated species, the clusters must secondarily split into individual oocytes. In the vitellarium, the oocytes are located outside the ovary. Each oocyte is connected to the ovarian tissue by a stalk composed of several somatic cells. The stalk cells directly associated with the oocyte are equipped with irregular projections that reach the oocyte plasma membrane. This observation suggests that the stalk cells may play a nutritive role. The ooplasm of vitellogenic oocytes comprises mitochondria, free ribosomes, stacks of annulate lamellae, active Golgi complexes, and vesicles derived from these complexes. Within the latter, numerous electron-dense bodies are present. We suggest that these bodies contribute to yolk formation.  相似文献   

16.
The morphoanatomy of the ovary in Veturius sinuatus (Eschscholtz) was studied by light and transmission electron microscopy. Data from the female gonad of this species provide more extended and precise knowledge regarding the organization of the ovary in Passalidae. Ovaries are composed of a pair of long telotrophic meroistic ovarioles, with some differences compared to the bauplan of this ovary type in Polyphaga (Coleoptera). The terminal filament has an enlarged proximal region with irregularly shaped cells in apparent degeneration process embedded in a membranous system. Globular structures with amorphous content associated with interstitial cells are distributed throughout the tropharium. Trophocytes develop with the reduction of the plasma membrane between sibling nurse cells of each cluster. Previtellogenic oocytes have an irregular shape and various cytoplasmic prolongations. As oogenesis advances, a single prolongation in the anterior part of the oocyte extends to the tropharium. The ovary structure is comparable to that found in other American species of passalids, and further, the conformation of the terminal filament could be a plesiomorphic character of the family.  相似文献   

17.
The ovaries of Euborellia fulviceps are composed of five elongated ovarioles of meroistic-polytrophic type. The individual ovariole has three discernible regions: the terminal filament, germarium, and vitellarium. The terminal filament is a stalk of flattened, disc-shaped somatic cells. In the germarium, germline cells in subsequent stages of differentiation are located, and the vitellarium comprises numerous ovarian follicles arranged linearly. The individual ovarian follicles within the vitellarium are separated by prominent interfollicular stalks. The follicles are composed by two germline cells only: an oocyte and a single, polyploid nurse cell, which are surrounded by a monolayer of somatic follicular cells (FCs). During subsequent stages of oogenesis, initially uniform follicular epithelium begins to diversify into morphologically and physiologically distinct subpopulations. In E. fulviceps, the FC diversification mode is rather simple and leads to the formation of only three different FC subpopulations: (1) cuboidal FCs covering the oocyte, (2) stretched FCs surrounding the nurse cell and (3) FCs actively migrating between oocyte and a nurse cell. We found that FCs from the latter subpopulation send long and thin filopodium-like and microtubule-rich processes penetrating between the oocyte and nurse cell membranes. This suggests that, in E. fulviceps, cells from at least one FCs subpopulation show the ability to change position within an ovarian follicle by means of active migration.  相似文献   

18.
《Zoology (Jena, Germany)》2014,117(3):207-215
Recent molecular studies have indicated a close relationship between Crustacea and Hexapoda and postulated their unification into the Pancrustacea/Tetraconata clade. Certain molecular analyses have also suggested that the crustacean lineage, which includes the Branchiopoda, might be the sister group of Hexapoda. We test this hypothesis by analyzing the structure of the ovary and the ultrastructural features of oogenesis in two branchiopod species, Cyzicus tetracerus and Lynceus brachyurus, representing two separate orders, Spinicaudata and Laevicaudata, respectively. The female gonads of these species have not been investigated before. Here, we demonstrate that in both studied species the ovarian follicles develop inside characteristic ovarian protrusions and comprise a germline cyst surrounded by a simple somatic (follicular) epithelium, supported by a thin basal lamina. Each germline cyst consists of one oocyte and three supporting nurse cells, and the oocyte differentiates relatively late during ovarian follicle development. The synthesis of oocyte reserve materials involves rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes. The follicular cells are penetrated by a complex canal system and there is no external epithelial sheath covering the ovarian follicles. The structure of the ovary and the ultrastructural characteristics of oogenesis are not only remarkably similar in both Cyzicus and Lynceus, but also share morphological similarities with Notostraca as well as the basal hexapods Campodeina and Collembola. Possible phylogenetic implications of these findings are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of the study was to determine the expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen protein (PCNA) in the pig ovary. The localization of PCNA was demonstrated in paraffin sections of pig ovarian tissue using primary mouse monoclonal anti-PCNA antibody. In primordial follicles, no remarkable staining for PCNA either in granulosa cells or in the oocytes was observed. In primary to secondary follicles, positive staining in oocytes and in some granulosa cells was detected. The advanced preantral and particularly actively growing small to large antral follicles showed extensive PCNA labeling in the layers of granulosa and theca cells and in the cumulus cells encircling the oocyte. PCNA labeling was expressed in nuclei of oocytes in preantral and small antral follicles. In atretic follicles, the level of PCNA protein expression was dependent on the stage of atresia. Follicles demonstrating advanced atresia showed only limited or no PCNA labeled granulosa and theca cells. The results of the study demonstrate that follicular growth and development in pig ovary may be effectively monitored by determining the granulosa cell expression of PCNA.  相似文献   

20.
In rodents, the formation of ovarian follicles occurs after birth. In recent years, several factors required for follicular assembly and the growth of the newly formed follicles have been identified. We now describe a novel gene, Fxna, identified by differential display in the neonatal rat ovary. Fxna encodes an mRNA of 5.4 kb, and a protein of 898 amino acids. Fxna is a transmembrane metallopeptidase from family M28, localized to the endoplasmic reticulum. In the ovary, Fxna mRNA is expressed in granulosa cells; its abundance is maximal 48 hours after birth, i.e. during the initiation of follicular assembly. Reducing Fxna mRNA levels via lentiviral-mediated delivery of short hairpin RNAs to neonatal ovaries resulted in substantial loss of primordial, primary and secondary follicles, and structural disorganization of the ovary, with many abnormal follicles containing more than one oocyte and clusters of somatic cells not associated with any oocytes. These abnormalities were not attributable to either increased apoptosis or decreased proliferation of granulosa cells. The results indicate that Fxna is required for the organization of somatic cells and oocytes into discrete follicular structures. As an endoplasmic reticulum-bound peptidase, Fxna may facilitate follicular organization by processing precursor proteins required for intraovarian cell-to-cell communication.  相似文献   

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