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1.
Spermatogenesis and the sperm structure of the terebrantian Aeolothrips intermedius Bagnall are described. Spermatogenesis consists of two mitotic divisions; the second is characterized by the loss of half of the spermatids, which have pyknotic nuclei. Early spermatids have two centrioles, but when spermiogenesis starts, a third centriole is produced. The three basal bodies give rise to three flagella; later these fuse into a single flagellum which contains three 9 + 0 axonemes. The basal bodies are surrounded by a large amount of centriole adjunct material. During spermiogenesis this material contributes to the shifting of the three axonemes towards the anterior sperm region parallel to the elongating nucleus, and it is transformed into a dense cylinder. In the mature spermatids the three axonemes amalgamate to create a bundle of 27 doublet microtubules. Near the end of spermiogenesis the dense cylinder of the centriole adjunct lies parallel to the nucleus and the axonemes. It ends where the mitochondrion appears at half-sperm length. We confirm that Terebrantia testes have a single sperm cyst; their sperm are characterized by a cylindrical nucleus, three axonemes fused into one, a small mitochondrion and a short cylindrical centriole adjunct which corresponds to the dense body described in a previous work. The acrosome is lacking. At the midpoint of the anterior half of the sperm the outline of the cross-section is bilobed, with the nucleus contained in a pocket evagination of the plasma membrane. These characters are discussed in light of a comparison between Tubulifera and Terebrantia.  相似文献   

2.
Some stages of spermiogenesis of the marine heterotardigrade Echiniscoides sigismundi were investigated employing conventional electron microscopy. Spermatids are connected to each other by cytoplasmic bridges. A large vesicle originating from dictyosomes is formed in early spermatids; it becomes condensed in later stages (‘dense body’). Early spermatids contain two mitochondria closely attached and largely unmodified. In an advanced stage of development a (pseudo?) acrosome is formed close to the nucleus. Formation takes place at the face of the nucleus opposite the dictyosomes that had contributed to the dense body. Numerous microtubules lie near the centriole and throughout the cytoplasm. In late spermatids mitochondria located in a membrane-bounded sac lying more or less parallel to the flagellum. These ‘free mitochondria’ as well as the elongated nucleus with the (pseudo?) acrosome give the spermatozoon two additional ‘tails’. Data on spermiogenesis and spermatozoon ultrastructure mainly in marine Heterotardigrada are still very limited and often too anecdotal to allow reasonable conclusions to be drawn. However, structural features shared by Eu- and Heterotardigrada are emphasised.  相似文献   

3.
This is the first study investigating spermatogenesis and spermatozoan ultrastructure in the polyclad flatworm Prosthiostomum siphunculus. The testes are numerous and scattered as follicles ventrally between the digestive ramifications. Each follicle contains the different stages of sperm differentiation. Spermatocytes and spermatids derive from a spermatogonium and the spermatids remain connected by intercellular bridges. Chromatoid bodies are present in the cytoplasm of spermatogonia up to spermatids. During early spermiogenesis, a differentiation zone appears in the distal part of spermatids. A ring of microtubules extends along the entire sperm shaft just beneath the cell membrane. An intercentriolar body is present and gives rise to two axonemes, each with a 9 + “1” micro‐tubular pattern. Development of the spermatid leads to cell elongation and formation of a filiform, mature spermatozoon with two free flagella and with cortical microtubules along the sperm shaft. The flagella exit the sperm shaft at different levels, a finding common for acotyleans, but so far unique for cotylean polyclads. The Golgi complex produces numerous electron‐dense bodies of two types and of different sizes. These bodies are located around a perinuclear row of mitochondria. The elongated nucleus extends almost along the entire sperm body. The nucleus is wide in the proximal part and becomes narrow going towards the distal end. Thread‐like chromatin mixed with electron‐dense intranuclear spindle‐shaped bodies are present throughout nucleus. The general sperm ultrastructure, the presence of intranuclear bodies and a second type of cytoplasmic electron‐dense bodies may provide characters useful for phylogenetic analysis.  相似文献   

4.
The spermatozoon and some spermatid stages of Siboglinum (Pogonophora) have been examined by light and electron microscopy. In the spermatozoon a helical acrosome, a helical nucleus and a “body” with axonema follow each other in normal sequence. Head and tail are joined by a very short neck region containing two modified centrioles. The posterior portion of the nucleus is surrounded by a mitochondrial sheath consisting of three tightly wound mitochondrial helices. In the main portion of the tail the 9+2 unit is sorrounded by a granular sheath of dense material. In the neck region a centriole adjunct develops into a dense substance containing about nine rods. At an early stage, when the centriolar apparatus and flagellum become associated with the nucleus, three large mitochondria with fairly regular cristae are seen at the base of the nucleus. A well developed Golgi apparatus is present in early stages. Rows of microtubules are observed encircling the spermatid nucleus. Compared with the primitive type of spermatozoon the pogonophore sperm shows elongated and specialized nucleus, acrosome and mitochondria. It is concluded that the ancestral form must have had a fairly primitive spermatozoon and that evolution has proceeded towards a modified sperm with complicated spiral structure in connection with the evolution of a modified biology of fertilization, viz. specialized spermatophores. It is not known how the spermatophore discharges the spermatozoa nor how the spermatozoa find their way to the eggs. Two kinds of sperms are produced in the gonads of Siboglinum. The atypical sperm is smaller than the typical one.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract Spermatids in different stages of development are connected by intercellular bridges. Later the disappearance of these is correlated with sloughing off the residual cytoplasm. At the onset of spermiogenesis, chromatin is agglomerated at the periphery of the nucleus. Later this disperses and no chromatin condensation takes place. There is a steady reduction in the nucleus size. This is correlated with increase in the number of small vesicles and microtubules in the cytoplasm. Eventually the nucleus becomes very small, and is surrounded by a complex system of microtubules. Following spermiogenesis process the mitochondria lose their cristae and contain adielectronic material. The mature sperm is spindle-shaped, tapering at both ends. In both ends there are only microtubules present terminating freely in the cytoplasm. In its middle there are a number of rod-shaped mitochondria containing an electron dense material. The microtubules in the middle part of the sperm are arranged in a hexagonal pattern and in others in rows interspersed with single ones. The structure of Pycnogonum littorale sperm is highly modified, which may explain the special mode of fertilisation.  相似文献   

6.
The spermatozoon of Chiton marginatus is a long uniflagellate cell displaying structural features of “modified sperm.” The nucleus presents a conical shape with a long apical cylindrical extension. The chromatin is homogeneously dense. Scattered inside the condensed nucleus, a few nuclear lacunae are visible. The acrosomal complex is lacking. Some mitochondria are located in a laterofrontal structure side by side with the nucleus. The typical midpiece is absent. The cytoplasm forms a thin layer around the nucleus and the mitochondria. The proximal centriole is in a basal nuclear indent. The distal centriole serves to form the axoneme tail with the usual microtubular pattern. During nuclear maturation, the early spermatid nucleus is spherical and contains fine granular chromatin patches. The nuclear envelope shows a deposit of dense material at the base of the nucleus, forming a semicircular invagination occupied by a flocculent mass. In middle spermatid stage, the chromatin gets organized in filaments, coiled as a hank, attached over the inner surface of the basal thickening of the nuclear envelope. The nucleus starts to elongate anteroposteriorly. At the pointed apical portion of the spermatid, a group of microtubules is observed seeming to impose external pressure to the nucleus giving rise to the long apical nuclear point. The mitochondria have a basal position. Late spermatids have an elongated conical nucleus. The chromatin filaments are further condensed, and lacunae appear inside the nucleus. Some mitochondria migrate to a lateral position.  相似文献   

7.
The spermatogenesis of the proturan Acerentomon microrhinus Berlese, (Redia 6:1–182, 1909) is described for the first time with the aim of comparing the ultrastructure of the flagellated sperm of members of this taxon with that of the supposedly related group, Collembola. The apical region of testes consists of a series of large cells with giant polymorphic nuclei and several centrosomes with 14 microtubule doublets, whose origin is likely a template of a conventional 9-doublet centriole. Beneath this region, there are spermatogonial cells, whose centrosome has two centrioles, both with 14 microtubule doublets; the daughter centriole of the pair has an axial cylinder. Slender parietal cells in the testes have centrioles with nine doublet microtubules. Spermatocytes produce short primary cilia with 14 microtubule doublets. Spermatids have a single basal body with 14 microtubule doublets. Anteriorly, a conical dense material is present, surrounded by a microtubular basket, which can be seen by using an α-anti-tubulin antibody. Behind this region, the basal body expresses a long axoneme of 14 microtubule doublets with only inner arms. An acrosome is lacking. The nucleus is twisted around the apical conical dense structure and the axoneme; this coiling seems to be due to the rotation of the axoneme on its longitudinal axis. The posterior part of the axoneme forms three turns within the spermatid cytoplasm. Few unchanged mitochondria are scattered in the cytoplasm. Sperm consist of encysted, globular cells that descend along the deferent duct lumen. Some of them are engulfed by the epithelial cells, which thus have a spermiophagic activity. Sperm placed in a proper medium extend their flagellar axonemes and start beating. Protura sperm structure is quite different from that of Collembola sperm; and on the basis of sperm characters, a close relationship between the two taxa is not supported.  相似文献   

8.
褶纹冠蚌精子发生的研究   总被引:12,自引:1,他引:11  
光镜和透射电镜研究结果表明:褶纹冠蚌精子发生是非同步的,精子发生经历了一系列重要的形态和结构变化,主要包括:核逐步延长、染色质浓缩、线粒体逐渐发达与融合、胞质消除以及鞭毛的形成。精原细胞胞质中含有许多致密的轴纤丝,它们后来形成鞭毛轴丝。精母细胞质中含有线粒体、中心粒、内质网和电子透明的囊泡。精细胞分化为4个时期。成熟精子属原始类型,由头部、中段和尾部三部分组成。多核结构和细胞间桥自始至终存在于精子  相似文献   

9.
10.
Summary The present study examines spermiogenesis, and in particular the formation of the acrosome, in ten species of chitons belonging to four families. This study emphasizes the formation of the acrosome but brings to light several other structures that have received little or no mention in previous studies. The process of spermiogenesis is essentially similar in each species, although Chaetopleura exhibits some significant differences. In early spermiogenesis the Golgi body secretes numerous small pro-acrosomal vesicles that gradually migrate into the apical cytoplasm. The chromatin condenses from granules into fibres which become twisted within the nucleus. A small bundle of chromatin fibres projects from the main nuclear mass into the anterior filament; this coincides with the appearance of a developing manchette of microtubules around the nucleus that originates from the two centrioles. Radiating from the distal centriole is the centriolar satellite complex, which is attached to the plasma membrane by the annulus. The distal centriole produces the flagellum posteriorly and it exits eccentrically through a ring of folded membrane that houses the annulus. Extending from the annulus on one side of the flagellum, in all but one species, is a dense fibrous body that has not been previously reported. The proximal centriole lies perpendicular to the end of the distal centriole and is attached to it by fibro-granular material. Pro-acrosomal vesicles migrate anteriorly through the cytoplasm and move into the anterior filament to one side of the expanding nucleus. Eventually these vesicles migrate all the way to the tip of the sperm, where they fuse to form one of two granules in the acrosome. In mature sperm the nucleus is bullet-shaped with a long anterior filament and contains dense chromatin with occasional lacunae. The mitochondria vary in both number and position in the mature sperm of different species. Both centrioles are housed eccentrically in a posterior indentation of the nucleus, where the membranes are modified. The elongate flagellum tapers to a long filamentous end-piece that roughly corresponds to the anterior filament and may be important in sperm locomotion for hydrodynamic reasons. An acrosome is present in all ten species and stained positively for acid phosphatase in three species that were tested.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract. The spermatozoa of Exogone naidina and E. dispar are characterized by a prominent bell-shaped acrosome, a spheroidal nucleus, and a conventional flagellum. During spermiogenesis, the acrosomal vesicle undergoes conspicuous modifications leading to its final bell shape with a posterior opening. The subacrosomal material initially shows radiating filaments but in mature sperms it appears as a meshwork of electron-opaque material. The acrosomal axis is oblique with respect to the main longitudinal sperm axis. The chromatin is arranged in electron-opaque strands in the early spermatids, then becomes amorphous, and is finally organized in filaments in mature sperms. Centrioles are orthogonally arranged beneath the nucleus and fibers radiate from the distal centriole to contact the plasma membrane and the single mitochondrion. The latter is located eccentrically on the side of the nucleus opposite the acrosome. A disk-shaped structure is evident beneath the distal centriole. The flagellar axoneme has a 9+2 microtubule pattern. A conspicuous glycocalyx surrounds the flagellar plasma membrane, and an electron-lucent space is present between these two structures at the distal tip of the flagellum. We compare the sperm morphology of these two species of Exogone with that described in other members of the subfamily Exogoninae. The fine structure of these two species supports the occurrence of an ent-aquasperm type within Exogoninae, in accordance with the brood strategy present within this subfamily. The mode of reproduction is of taxonomic importance for defining subfamilies within Syllidae, and is likely also of phylogenetic significance. Because epitoky is probably plesiomorphic, the ent-aquasperm type found in Exogoninae can be considered a derived feature within Syllidae.  相似文献   

12.
The fine structure of the developing spermatids and the mature sperm of Nippostrongylus brasiliensis was investigated. Immature spermatids are found at one end of the tubelike testis, and the mature sperm at the other. The spermatid has a prominent nucleus, with the chromatin clumped at the margin. It also contains a pair of centrioles, located near the nucleus. The cytoplasm is filled with ribosomal clusters, but it lacks an organized Golgi area or endoplasmic reticulum. Besides the normal mitochondria, the spermatid has specialized mitochondrionlike inclusions with dense matrix, few broad cristae, and a crystalloid structure always facing the nucleus. As spermiogenesis proceeds, the nucleus elongates, comes to lie at one end, and later evaginates to form a separate head structure, leaving the mitochondria and other cytoplasmic organelles in a broad cytoplasmic region. The nuclear material becomes filamentous and spiral, and the centrioles come to lie at one end near the junction of the head and the cytoplasmic portion of the sperm. Microtubules are found in the cytoplasmic region extending from the tubelike nucleus. The specialized mitochondria are about eighteen in number, and are arranged in rows in staggered groups of three around the microtubules in the cytoplasmic region. The mature sperm is aflagellate and lacks an acrosome. No movement of the sperm was ever observed.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Spermiogenesis inNebalia pugettensis andN. sp. of the subclass Phyllocarida was investigated by transmission electron microscopy. Spermiogenesis is almost identical in the two species. Early spermatids are found in groups with several nuclei in a common cytoplasm. Specializations of the cell surface appear as small, scattered dense knobs underlying the cell membrane. The spermatids become separated but are kept together by a surrounding vegetative cell, which produces a hyaline secretion. The secretion hardens to a capsule surrounding a number of spermatids. Maturation of the spermatids takes place within the secretion. The cells become dense and compact, the cytoplasm vacuolizes, and the mitochondria show signs of degeneration. The centrioles disappear and the surface of the cell becomes irregular and spiny, as the knobs, present in the early spermatids, develop into small spines. Spermatozoa from a spermatophore are small and compact spiny cells without polarity, with a vacuolized cytoplasm and degenerating mitochondria. Acrosomal structures and axonema or flagellum are absent in all developmental stages of theNebalia sperm.  相似文献   

14.
Sperm ultrastructure in the rare deep-sea cephalopod Vampyroteuthis infernalis is described, based on formalin-fixed material held in the Australian Museum (Sydney). The species is the sole member of the coleoidean order Vampyromorpha, which represents a level of organization intermediate between that of the Sepioidea-Teuthoidea and the Octopoda. Spermatozoa of Vampyroteuthis, the simplest observed in any cephalopod, exhibit the following features: (1) a spheroidal acrosome lacking any complex substructure; (2) a short (8.5 microns) fusiform nucleus with a deep (2.2-2.5 microns) basal invagination (containing an extensive plug of dense material); (3) two triplet centrioles arranged parallel to the sperm longitudinal axis; (4) a short (1 micron) midpiece composed of a triangular cluster of mitochondria surrounding the centrioles; and (5) a tail (length 130-135 microns) that is continuous with one of the centrioles (here considered as a 'distal' centriole). An annulus and membranous skirt are absent, though the coarse fibres do fuse into a ring at the tail-midpiece junction). These cells show some resemblance to sperm or spermatids of sepioids and teuthoids (spheroidal acrosome, short nucleus) but are also remarkably similar to mid-spermatids of Octopus (with the exception of the uncondensed nucleus in Octopus spermatids). Sperm morphology supports the current assignment of Vampyroteuthis to a separate coleoidean order--Vampyromorpha--and also suggests that a close link exists between the Vampyromorpha and Octopoda.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The spermatozoon of Atelura formicaria (Zygentoma) shows several features that are typical of insects: an apical acrosome, an elongated dense nucleus, a centriole with expanded centriolar adjunct material, two large mitochondrial derivatives, and two thin accessory bodies located beneath the nucleus. The axoneme exhibits a 9 + 9 + 2 pattern with accessory tubules formed by 16 protofilaments and intertubular material. However, spermatozoa of A. formicaria show some remarkable features. The sperm cell is short for an insect, being only 50 µm in length. The nucleus is characterized by the presence of two lateral grooves which are filled with numerous infoldings of the nuclear envelope. In a cross-section the chromatin has the configuration of the Leonardo da Vinci's 'Vitruvian man'. Each mitochondrial derivative has a peculiar structure with peripheral cristae and four crystalline bodies in its matrix; two of these crystalline bodies are large and have differently orientated cristal planes. At the end of spermiogenesis, sperm bundles are stored in the proximal part of the testes. Secretions from the epithelial wall of this region give rise to large globular structures. These include sperm bundles intermingled with dense granules, forming the so called 'spermatolophids'. These formations descend along the deferent duct and are stored in the expanded seminal vesicle. Atelura spermatozoa do not pair as in some Lepismatidae, nor do they fuse as in Tricholepidion (Lepidotrichidae). Thus, sperm aggregation in Zygentoma is realized according to different modalities and can hardly be considered as a synapomorphic trait of its subtaxa.  相似文献   

17.
文昌鱼精子的超显微结构   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
文昌鱼(Branchiostoma belcheri tsingtaoensis)的成熟精子由一个锥形的顶体,头部,颈(被核包裹)和尾部组成。尾可分为中段,主段和末段。微管对复合体为9+2。 文昌鱼精子的超显微结构与前人报道的线粒体由4—6个组成的不同。它由一个大的线粒体围绕尾主轴中段,而且精子属于对称性类型,可以见到核内管,中心粒和致密纤维,终环结构与隐窝位于尾中段与主段之间。本文并对文昌鱼在系统发生中的重要位置和意义作了讨论。  相似文献   

18.
The aim of this study was to analyse spermatogenesis in the African butterflyfish, Pantodon buchholzi, using transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. P. buchholzi is the most basal teleost that exhibits insemination and produces a highly complex introsperm with the most elongate midpiece known in teleost fishes. Their early stages (spermatogonia and spermatocytes) do not differ greatly from those of other fishes, with the exception of Golgi apparatus degradation appearing as spindle-shaped bodies (SSBs). In round, early spermatids, the development of the flagellum begins after the migration of the centriolar complex towards the nucleus. Later, the elongation of the midpiece coincides with the displacement of the mitochondria and their fusion to produce nine mitochondrial derivatives (MDs). In these spermatids, the nucleus is situated laterally to the midpiece, with condensing chromatin in the centre of the nucleus. Within the midpiece, the flagellum is located within a cytoplasmic canal and is surrounded by a cytoplasmic sleeve containing fibres, MDs and a great amount of cytoplasm located on one side. During the next phase, nuclear rotation, the highly condensed chromatin is displaced to a position above the centriolar apparatus, whereas chromatin-free nucleoplasm is transferred to the cytoplasm. Later, this nucleoplasm, still surrounded by the nuclear membrane, is eliminated into the cyst lumen as the nucleoplasmic packet. Within the highly elongate spermatids, other excess organelles (SSBs, endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria) are eliminated as residual bodies (RBs). Fully developed spermatozoa, which contain conical-shaped nuclei, eventually coalesce to form unencapsulated sperm packets (spermatozeugmata) that are surrounded by RBs at the level of the extremely elongate midpieces. Later, RBs are removed at the periphery of the cyst by means of phagocytosis by Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

19.
Spermatogenesis and the morphology of mature sperm in the free-living chromadorid Paracyatholaimus pugettensis from the Sea of Japan were studied using transmission electron microscopy. In spermatocytes fibrous bodies (FBs) appear; in spermatids, the synthetic apparatus is located in the residual body, whereas the main cell body (MCB) houses the nucleus, mitochondria, and FBs. The nucleus of the spermatid consists of a loose fibrous chromatin that is not surrounded by a nuclear envelope; centrioles lie in the perinuclear cytoplasm. The plasma membrane of the spermatid MCB forms numerous filopodia. Immature spermatozoa from the proximal part of the testis are polygonal cells with a central nucleus. The latter is surrounded by mitochondria and FBs with poorly defined boundaries. The immature spermatozoa bear lamellipodia all along their surface. Mature spermatozoa are polarized cells with an anterior pseudopodium, which is filled with filaments that make up the cytoskeleton; the MCB houses a nucleus that is surrounded by mitochondria and osmiphilic bodies. In many ultrastructural characteristics, the spermatozoa of P. Pugettensis are similar to those of most nematode species studied so far (i.e., they are ameboid, have no acrosome, axoneme, or nuclear envelope). On the other hand, as in other chromadorids, no aberrant membrane organelles were observed during spermatogenesis of P. Pugettensis.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2004 by Biologiya Morya, Zograf, Yushin.  相似文献   

20.
Summary

The stages of spermiogenesis in Myobia murismusculi were investigated on the basis of ultrastructural analysis of both the testes and the female organs: receptaculum seminis and seminal duct. The walls of the testes consist of a thin epithelial layer. Germ and secretory cells lie free in the lumen of the testes. In the early stages of differentiation, both cell types represent clusters of sister cells joined by intercellular bridges. Each secretory cell contains prominent RER and Golgi complex, which produce single dense granule. Growing gradually the granule fills the whole volume of the cell's cytoplasm. Mature secretory cells disintegrate and the secretory product discharges into the testicular lumen. The germ cells are represented by the early, the intermediate and the late spermatids as well as the immature sperm (prospermia). Neither spermatogonia nor meiotic figures were observed in adult males. As spermiogenesis starts, numerous narrow invaginations of the outer membrane (peripheral channels) develop on the cell surface. They form a wide circumferential network connected to pinocytotic vesicles. Owing to the secretory activity of the Golgi complex, a large acrosomal granule is formed in the early spermatids. A long acrosomal filament runs along the intranuclear canal. Nuclear material condenses and forms two spherical bodies of different electron density. The lighter one can be observed until the stage of the late spermatids, when the nuclear envelope almost completely disappears. The electron-dense nuclear body transforms into a definite chromatin body, which is observed in the mature sperm as a cup-shaped structure. The late spermatids are characterized by the presence of a large electronlucent vacuole, which seems to be unique for the process of spermiogenesis in Actinedida. After the spermia enter the female genital tract, the peripheral channels disappear as well as the vacuole. The cells form long amoeboid arms with a special microtubular layer underneath the plasma membrane. The chromatin body is encircled by a large acrosomal granule of complex shape provided by long extensions running deep into the cytoplasm. The cytoplasm contains no organelles except for a group of unmodified mitochondria in the post-nuclear region. The main characteristics of the Myobia spermiogenesis are discussed with regard to other actinedid mites.  相似文献   

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