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1.
The swamp eel, Synbranchus marmoratus, is a protogynous, diandric species. During sex reversal, the ovarian germinal epithelium, which forms follicles containing an oocyte and encompassing follicle cells during the female portion of the life cycle, produces numerous invaginations, or acini, into the ovarian stroma. Within the acini, the gonia that formerly produced oocytes become spermatogonia, enter meiosis, and produce sperm. The acini are bounded by the basement membrane of the germinal epithelium. Epithelial cells of the female germinal epithelium, which formerly became follicle (granulosa) cells, now become Sertoli cells in the developing testis. Subsequently, lobules and testicular ducts form. The swamp eel testis has a lobular germinal compartment in both primary and secondary males, although the germinal compartment in testes of secondary males resides within the former ovarian lamellae. The germinal compartment, supported by a basement membrane, is composed of Sertoli and germ cells that give rise to sperm. Histological and immunohistochemical techniques were used to describe the five reproductive classes that were observed to occur during the annual reproductive cycle: regressed, early maturation, mid-maturation, late maturation, and regression. These classes are differentiated by the presence of continuous or discontinuous germinal epithelia and by the types of germ cells present. Synbranchus marmoratus has a permanent germinal epithelium. Differences between the germinal compartment of the testes of primary and secondary males were not observed.  相似文献   

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3.
The structure of the testes and maturity stages in the male silvery croaker, Otolithes ruber were investigated from March 1999 to March 2000. Based on the location of spermatogonia within the germinal epithelium, the testis structure is classified as the unrestricted spermatogonial testicular type. Germ cells proliferate through mitotic divisions of spermatogonia, giving rise to primary and secondary spermatocytes, which through meiotic divisions transform into spermatids. As spermatogenesis progresses, an elongation of the testicular lobules takes place. During final spermiogenesis, spermatids are arranged in clusters, with heads in one direction and tails in the opposite. Spermatozoa are then liberated from these structures into the lobula lumina. The testicular lobules further elongate, and many of them form a continuum within the germinal epithelium, extending toward the periphery. The walls of the other lobules fuse, producing anastomosing sperm-filled lobular compartments. A main sperm duct is formed into which spermatozoa from the lobules are voided. A time lapse between sexual maturity and onset of spawning was observed, thus supporting the existing view that the anastomosing compartments are used for sperm storage during the latter part of the maturation process. Six maturity stages of the testis are delineated during the annual reproductive cycle based on macroscopic and histological characteristics. Results show that male O. ruber spawns from March through April in Kuwaiti waters.  相似文献   

4.
 Testis organization and spermatogenesis, with the emphasis on spermiogenesis, in Opistognathus whitehurstii are described by ultrastructural and histochemical methods. The germinal epithelium is extremely reduced and restricted to the periphery of the testis, while most of the organ is occupied by a highly developed system of testicular efferent ducts. A semicystic type of spermatogenesis is observed and in the germinal epithelium spermatogenesis occurs only until the spermatidal stage. Young spermatids are released into the lumen of the testicular lobules and mature to sperm within the efferent duct system. The epithelial cells of these ducts are involved in protein and glycogen secretion and in phagocytosis of degenerating germ cells and residual bodies cast off by developing spermatids. On the basis of these functions, the testicular efferent duct system cells are considered to be homologous to the Sertoli cells. A correlation between a highly developed testicular efferent duct system and semicystic spermatogenesis is examined and a possible functional meaning of this apparently unusual mode of sperm production is proposed. Accepted: 18 March 1997  相似文献   

5.
Testicular maturation and regression in the common snook   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
During the annual reproductive cycle, the lobular testis of Centropomus undecimalis undergoes height, width, and morphological changes which reflect five reproductive classes: regressed; early, mid-, and late maturation; and regression. Histological criteria, particularly differences between continuous and discontinuous germinal epithelia, are used to distinguish these five classes, even though they are only reference points within the annual gonadal cycle. A mechanism for lobular growth during early, mid-, and late maturation is presented; and it is hypothesized that a permanent germinal epithelium first appeared in the fishes. Throughout the year, periodic acid-Schiff-positive macro-melanophage centres and PAS-positive granulocytes are observed in the testis. They are most abundant after the breeding season, and they may be involved in focal tissue degradation.  相似文献   

6.
An understanding of testicular anatomy, development, and seasonality has implications for studies of morphology, behavior, physiology, and bioenergetics of males. Ontogenetic testicular development and spermatogenesis is essentially unknown for chondrichthyans. We examined embryo, juvenile, and adult male Cownose Rays (Rhinoptera bonasus) during development and throughout the annual reproductive cycle. Spermatogonia and Sertoli cells originated from germ cells and somatic cells, respectively, in the embryonic testicular germinal epithelium. In embryos and small juveniles, discrete regions of spermatocyst production appeared within a series of papillae that projected from the dorsal surface of each testis. Because these papillary germinal zones appeared to proliferate through ontogeny, we hypothesize that (1) the germinal zones of juvenile and adult testes are derived from embryonic testicular papillae that form from the germinal epithelium and (2) the papillae become the dorso-central portion of the distinct testicular lobes that form at maturation due to increased spermatocyst production. Our observations indicate that testicular development and the process of spermatogenesis began during embryonic development and increased in scale through ontogeny until maturation, when distinct testicular lobes formed and began enlarging or shrinking based on the annual reproductive cycle. Gonadosomatic indices peaked corresponding to seasonal increased sperm production between January and April, just prior to the April–June mating period. In all life stages, spermatocysts had efferent ducts associated with them from their formation through all stages of development. Year-round presence in the Charlotte Harbor estuarine system, Florida made R. bonasus a good model for beginning to understand ontogenetic gonad development and spermatogenesis in chondrichthyans, especially viviparous rays.  相似文献   

7.
The viviparous lizards of the Sceloporus genus exhibit both seasonal and continuous spermatogenesis. The viviparous lizard Sceloporus mucronatus from Tecocomulco, Hidalgo, México, exhibits seasonal spermatogenesis. This study demonstrates the relationship between changes in testis volume, spermatogenesis activity, and Leydig cells during the male reproductive cycle of S. mucronatus. A recrudescence period is evident, which starts in the winter when testicular volume is reduced and climaxes in February, when the greatest mitotic activity of spermatogonia occurs. The testicular volume and Leydig cell index increase gradually during the spring with primary spermatocytes being the most abundant cell type observed within the germinal epithelium. In the summer, the secondary spermatocytes and undifferentiated round spermatids are the most abundant germinal cells. The breeding season coincides with spermiogenesis and spermiation; testicular volume also increases significantly as does the Leydig cell index where these cells increase in both cytoplasmic and nuclear volume. During fall, testicular regression begins with a significant decrease in testicular volume and germinal epithelium height, although there are remnant spermatozoa left within the lumen of the seminiferous tubules. During this time, the Leydig cell index is also reduced, and there is a decrease in cellular and nuclear volumes within these interstitial cells. Finally, during quiescence in late fall, there is reduced testicular volume smaller than during regression, and only spermatogonia and Sertoli cells are present within the seminiferous tubules. Leydig cells exhibit a low index number, their cellular and nuclear volumes are reduced, and there is a depletion in lipid inclusion cytoplasmically.  相似文献   

8.
The gilthead seabream is a protandrous hermaphrodite seasonal breeding teleost with a bisexual gonad that offers an interesting model for studying the testicular regression process that occurs in both seasonal testicular involution and sex change. Insofar as fish reproduction is concerned, little is known about cell renewal and elimination during the reproductive cycle of seasonal breeding teleosts with asynchronous spermatogenesis. We have previously described how acidophilic granulocytes infiltrate the testis during postspawning where, surprisingly, they produce interleukin-1beta, a known growth factor for mammalian spermatogonia, rather than being directly involved in the elimination of degenerative germ cells. In this study, we are able to discriminate between spermatogonia stem cells and primary spermatogonia according to their nuclear and cytoplasmic diameters and location in the germinal epithelium, finding that these two cell types, together with Sertoli cells, proliferate throughout the reproductive cycle with a rate that depends on the reproductive stage. Thus, during spermatogenesis the spermatogonia stem cells, the Sertoli cells, and the developing germ cells (primary spermatogonia, A and B spermatogonia, and spermatocytes) in the germinal compartment, and cells with fibroblast-shaped nuclei in the interstitial tissue proliferate. However, during spawning, the testis shows few proliferating cells. During postspawning, the resumption of proliferation, the occurrence of apoptotic spermatogonia, and the phagocytosis of nonshed spermatozoa by Sertoli cells lead to a reorganization of both the germinal compartment and the interstitial tissue. Finally, the proliferation of spermatogonia increases during resting when, unexpectedly, both oogonia and oocytes also proliferate. This proliferative pattern was correlated with the gonadosomatic index, testicular morphology, and testicular and gonad areas, suggesting that complex mechanisms operate in the regulation of gonocyte proliferation in hermaphrodite fish.  相似文献   

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Spermatogenesis in male Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus L.) was investigated by sampling blood plasma and testicular tissue from 15-39-month-old fish. The experiment covered a period in which all fish reached puberty and completed sexual maturation at least once. The germinal compartment in Atlantic halibut testis appears to be organized in branching lobules of the unrestricted spermatogonial type, because spermatocysts with spermatogonia were found throughout the testis. Spermatogenesis was characterized histologically, and staged according to the most advanced type of germ cell present: spermatogonia (Stage I), spermatogonia and spermatocytes (Stage II), spermatogonia, spermatocytes and spermatids (Stage III), spermatogonia, spermatocytes, spermatids and spermatozoa (Stage IV), and regressing testis (Stage V). Three phases could be distinguished: first, an initial phase with low levels of circulating testosterone (T; quantified by RIA) and 11-ketotestosterone (11-KT; quantified by ELISA), spermatogonial proliferation, and subsequently the initiation of meiosis marked by the formation of spermatocytes (Stage I and II). Secondly, a phase with increasing T and 11-KT levels and with haploid germ cells including spermatozoa present in the testis (Stage III and IV). Thirdly, a phase with low T and 11-KT levels and a regressing testis with Sertoli cells displaying signs of phagocytotic activity (Stage V). Circulating levels of 11-KT were at least four-fold higher than those of T during all stages of spermatogenesis. Increasing plasma levels of T and 11-KT were associated with increasing testicular mass throughout the reproductive cycle. The absolute level of, or the relation between, testis growth and circulating androgens were not significantly different in first time spawners compared to fish that underwent their second spawning season. These results provide reference levels for Atlantic halibut spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
We describe seasonal variations of the histology of the seminiferous tubules and efferent ducts of the tropical, viviparous skink, Mabuya brachypoda, throughout the year. The specimens were collected monthly, in Nacajuca, Tabasco state, Mexico. The results revealed strong annual variations in testicular volume, stages of the germ cells, and diameter and height of the epithelia of seminiferous tubules and efferent ducts. Recrudescence was detected from November to December, when initial mitotic activity of spermatogonia in the seminiferous tubules were observed, coinciding with the decrease of temperature, photoperiod and rainy season. From January to February, early spermatogenesis continued and early primary and secondary spermatocytes were developing within the seminiferous epithelium. From March through April, numerous spermatids in metamorphosis were observed. Spermiogenesis was completed from May through July, which coincided with an increase in temperature, photoperiod, and rainfall. Regression occurred from August through September when testicular volume and spermatogenic activity decreased. During this time, the seminiferous epithelium decreased in thickness, and germ cell recruitment ceased, only Sertoli cells and spermatogonia were present in the epithelium. Throughout testicular regression spermatocytes and spermatids disappeared and the presence of cellular debris, and scattered spermatozoa were observed in the lumen. The regressed testes presented the total suspension of spermatogenesis. During October, the seminiferous tubules contained only spermatogonia and Sertoli cells, and the size of the lumen was reduced, giving the appearance that it was occluded. In concert with testis development, the efferent ducts were packed with spermatozoa from May through August. The epididymis was devoid of spermatozoa by September. M. brachypoda exhibited a prenuptial pattern, in which spermatogenesis preceded the mating season. The seasonal cycle variations of spermatogenesis in M. brachypoda are the result of a single extended spermiation event, which is characteristic of reptilian species. J. Morphol. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
金鱼精巢的细胞构造与精子的发生和形成   总被引:40,自引:2,他引:38  
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13.
The germinal epithelium, i.e., the site of germ cell production in males and females, has maintained a constant form and function throughout 500 million years of vertebrate evolution. The distinguishing characteristic of germinal epithelia among all vertebrates, males, and females, is the presence of germ cells among somatic epithelial cells. The somatic epithelial cells, Sertoli cells in males or follicle (granulosa) cells in females, encompass and isolate germ cells. Morphology of all vertebrate germinal epithelia conforms to the standard definition of an epithelium: epithelial cells are interconnected, border a body surface or lumen, are avascular and are supported by a basement membrane. Variation in morphology of gonads, which develop from the germinal epithelium, is correlated with the evolution of reproductive modes. In hagfishes, lampreys, and elasmobranchs, the germinal epithelia of males produce spermatocysts. A major rearrangement of testis morphology diagnoses osteichthyans: the spermatocysts are arranged in tubules or lobules. In protogynous (female to male) sex reversal in teleost fishes, female germinal epithelial cells (prefollicle cells) and oogonia transform into the first male somatic cells (Sertoli cells) and spermatogonia in the developing testis lobules. This common origin of cell types from the germinal epithelium in fishes with protogynous sex reversal supports the homology of Sertoli cells and follicle cells. Spermatogenesis in amphibians develops within spermatocysts in testis lobules. In amniotes vertebrates, the testis is composed of seminiferous tubules wherein spermatogenesis occurs radially. Emerging research indicates that some mammals do not have lifetime determinate fecundity. The fact emerged that germinal epithelia occur in the gonads of all vertebrates examined herein of both sexes and has the same form and function across all vertebrate taxa. Continued study of the form and function of the germinal epithelium in vertebrates will increasingly clarify our understanding of vertebrate reproduction. J. Morphol. 277:1014–1044, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Testis of Hemidactylus flaviviridis, commonly known as Indian wall lizard, displays a lack of cellular and metabolic activity in regressed phase of testis during non-breeding season of the year. Retracted Sertoli cells (Sc), fibroid myoid cells and pre-meiotic resting spermatogonia are observed in such testis. This situation is akin to certain forms of infertility in men where hormone supplementation fails to generate sperm despite the presence of Sc and germ cells (Gc) in testis. In testis of lizard, spermatogenesis is reinitiated upon increased level of hormones during appropriate season (phase of recrudescence). Study of genes associated with generation of sperm, from regressed adult testis in lizard, may provide valuable information for understanding certain forms of male idiopathic infertility. Subtractive hybridization using testicular RNA obtained from the regressed and active phases of lizard reproductive cycle led to identify eight partial mRNA sequences that showed sequence homology with mice genes. We further evaluated the gene expression prolife by real-time PCR in three different reproductive phases of H. flaviviridis: regressed (pre-meiotic), recrudescent (meiotic) and active (post meiotic), for comparison with the corresponding testicular phases found in testis of 5 days (pre-meiotic), 20 days (meiotic) and 60 days (post-meiotic) old mouse. This is the first report where genes associated with progression of spermatogenesis during active phase, which follows a regressed state of adult testis, were identified in lizard and found to be conserved in mouse. Six important genes, Hk1, Nme5, Akap4, Arih1, Rassf7 and Tubb4b were found to be strictly associated with active spermatogenesis in both mouse and lizard. Factors interfering with the expression of any of these genes may potentially abrogate the process of spermatogenesis leading to infertility. Such information may shed light on unknown causes of idiopathic male infertility.  相似文献   

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16.
The structure of the testis of Poecilia latipinna is described with particular reference to Sertoli cell-germ cell relationships during development and maturation of the germinal cyst. The cyst develops when primary spermatocytes become surrounded by a single layer of Sertoli cells at the testis periphery. As spermatogenesis and then spermiogenesis proceed, the cyst moves centrally in the testis toward the ducts comprising the vasa efferentia. In addition to being a structural part of the germinal cyst, the Sertoli cells phagocytize residual bodies cast off by developing spermatids and form an association with mature bodies cast off by developing spermatids and form an association with mature sperm, which resembles that observed in mammals, before the sperm are released into the vasa efferentia as a spermatozeugmata. The results of this investigation are discussed in view of what is known concerning testis structure in other teleosts and similarities between cell functions in teleosts and mammals. It is concluded that teleost Sertoli cells, teleost lobule boundary cells and mammalian Sertoli cells are homologous.  相似文献   

17.
The commonly applied classification systems of fish gonad maturity divide the maturation process into certain stages. However, the scales do not entirely reflect the continuity of the maturation process. Based on light microscope observations, the paper describes a comprehensive pattern of testicular transformations during maturation. The study was carried out on precocious underyearling and 1-year-old males of sea trout (Salmo trutta m. trutta L.), 1-year-old males of salmon (Salmo salar L.), and males of brown trout (Salmo trutta m. fario L.) aged from 7 months to 4 years. A total of 821 gonads collected during all seasons of the year were examined. The fish were fixed in Bouin's fluid. Histological slides of the mid-part of the gonad were made using the standard paraffin technique. The 3-6 microm sections were stained with Heidenhain haematoxylin. Histological changes of testes during maturation were similar in the three species studied. Immature and resting gonads contained type A spermatogonia in lobules only. The appearance of cystic structures containing type B spermatogonia in the lobules signalled the beginning of the sexual cycle in male gonads. Type B spermatogonia underwent synchronous mitotic divisions resulting in an increase in the total number of spermatogonia. As the spermatogenesis continued, the gonads showed a gradual increase in the number of cysts containing cells at all the spermatogenetic stages: type B spermatogonia, primary and secondary spermatocytes, spermatids, and spermatozoa. The well-formed spermatozoa were released to the lobule lumen once the Sertoli cells and spermatozoa connections broke up and the cyst disappeared. This was a continuous process observed throughout the spawning season. The spermatozoa were moved to the efferent duct. While some of the germ cells were completing spermatogenesis, the lobules contained less and less cysts with type B spermatogonia, primary and secondary spermatocytes, and spermatids; eventually all the cells completed spermatogenesis. At the end of maturation, vacuoles, up to 18.9 microm in final diameter (brown trout), appeared in the Sertoli cells. The vacuoles were visible in the lobule wall epithelium for a prolonged period of time. In most salmonid individuals examined, the reproductive cycles were observed to overlap. In some fish, the preparation for another cycle began very early, i.e., at the and of preceding spermatogenesis, which had not been observed before. Gonad maturation in some males was incomplete.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the structure of the male reproductive system in Ichthyophis supachaii. The testis comprises a series of mulberry‐like lobes, each of which contains testis lobules occupied by germ cysts. A single cyst consists of synchronously developing germ cells. Six spermatogenic cell types, viz. primary spermatogonia, secondary spermatogonia, primary spermatocytes, secondary spermatocytes, spermatids and spermatozoa, have been identified and described. Notably, the testis of I. supachaii encompasses specific organization patterns of spermatids and spermatozoa during spermiogenesis. Spermiating cysts rupture and release spermatozoa to the collecting ducts, which are subsequently transported to the sperm duct, Wolffian duct and cloaca. We report for the first time ciliated cells in the epithelium of the caecilian Wolffian duct. The cloaca is divided into the urodeum and phallodeum. The urodeum has ciliated and glandular epithelia at its dorsolateral and ventral regions, respectively, as the lining of its internal surface. The muscular phallodeum is lined by ciliated epithelium. Paired Mullerian ducts lie parallel to the intestine and join the cloaca. The posterior portion of the duct is modified as the Mullerian gland. The most posterior region is non‐glandular and lined by ciliated epithelium. Our findings contribute further to information on the reproductive biology of caecilians in Thailand.  相似文献   

19.
Fifteen male mosquito fish ( Gambusia affinis holbrooki ) were collected in 1989 on the 15th of each month to perform a quantitative histologic study of the annual testicular cycle including a calculation of the gonadosomatic index, testicular volume, and the total volume per testis occupied by each germ cell type. The cycle comprises two periods: spermatogenesis and quiescence. The spermatogenic period begins in April with the development of primary spermatogonia into secondary spermatogonia, spermatocytes and round spermatids. In May, the first spermatogenic wave is completed and the testicular volume begins to increase up to June when the maximum testicular volume and gonadosomatic index are reached. Germ cell proliferation with successive spermatogenetic waves continues until August. In September germ cell proliferation ceases and neither secondary spermatogonia nor spermatocytes are observed. However, spermiogenesis continues until October. In November, spermiogenesis has stopped and the testis enters the quiescent period up to April. During this period only primary spermatogonia and spermatozoa are present in the testis. In addition, a few spermatids whose spermiogenesis was arrested in November are observed. Testicular release of spermatozoa is continuous during the entire spermatogenesis period. The spermatozoa formed at the end of this period (September-October) remain in the testis during the quiescent period and are released at the beginning of the next spermatogenesis period in April. Developed Leydig cells appear all year long in the testicular interstitium, mainly around both efferent ducts and the testicular tubule sections showing S4 spermatids.  相似文献   

20.
The aims of the present study were to analyze the gonadal structure of Pseudoplatystoma fasciatum males during their annual cycle to enhance understanding of their reproductive biology and to improve the hormonally induced reproduction and culture of this species in hatcheries. We adopted the recently proposed method that establishes reproductive classes that are based on variations of the germinal epithelium within the year. Five reproductive classes were established: maturation (early, middle, and late), regression and recrudescence. Our observations revealed that in the spawning season P. fasciatum testes display two main functions: sperm production and sperm storage. We also concluded that the analysis of the variation of germinal epithelium was satisfactory when applied to this freshwater catfish and should be adopted for other fish species.  相似文献   

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