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1.
Previous electron microscope studies of sperm-egg association in the annelid Hydroides revealed novel aspects with respect to the acrosomal region. To determine whether these aspects were unique, a comparable study was made of a species belonging to a widely separated phylum, Hemichordata. Osmium tetroxide-fixed polyspermic material of the enteropneust, Saccoglossus, was used. The acrosomal region includes the membrane-bounded acrosome, with its large acrosomal granule and shallow adnuclear invagination, and the periacrosomal material which surrounds the acrosome except at the apex; here, the acrosomal membrane lies very close to the enclosing sperm plasma membrane. After reaching the egg envelope, the spermatozoon is activated and undergoes a series of changes: the apex dehisces and around the resulting orifice the acrosomal and sperm plasma membranes form a continuous mosaic membrane. The acrosomal granule disappears. Within 7 seconds the invagination becomes the acrosomal tubule, spans the egg envelopes, and meets the egg plasma membrane. The rest of the acrosomal vesicle everts. The periacrosomal mass changes profoundly: part becomes a fibrous core (possibly equivalent to a perforatorium); part remains as a peripheral ring. The basic pattern of structure and sperm-egg association in Saccoglossus is the same as in Hydroides. Previous evidence from four other phyla as interpreted here also indicates conformity to this pattern. The major role of the acrosome is apparently to deliver the sperm plasma membrane to the egg plasma membrane.  相似文献   

2.
This, the last of a series of three papers, deals with the final events which lead to the incorporation of the spermatozoon with the egg. The material used consisted of moderately polyspermic eggs of Hydroides hexagonus, osmium-fixed at various times up to five minutes after insemination. The first direct contact of sperm head with egg proper is by means of the acrosomal tubules. These deeply indent the egg plasma membrane, and consequently at the apex of the sperm head the surfaces of the two gametes become interdigitated. But at first the sperm and egg plasma membranes maintain their identity and a cross-section through the region of interdigitation shows these two membranes as a number of sets of two closely concentric rings. The egg plasma membrane rises to form a cone which starts to project into the hole which the spermatozoon earlier had produced in the vitelline membrane by means of lysis. But the cone does not literally engulf the sperm head. Instead, where they come into contact, sperm plasma membrane and egg plasma membrane fuse to form one continuous membranous sheet. At this juncture the two gametes have in effect become mutually incorporated and have formed a single fertilized cell with one continuous bounding membrane. At this time, at least, the membrane is a mosaic of mostly egg plasma membrane and a patch of sperm plasma membrane. The evidence indicates that the fusion of the two membranes results from vesiculation of the sperm and egg plasma membranes in the region at which they come to adjoin. Once this fusion of membranes is accomplished, the egg cytoplasm intrudes between the now common membrane and the internal sperm structures, such as the nucleus, and even extends into the flagellum; finally these sperm structures come to lie in the main body of the egg. The vesiculation suggested above appears possibly to resemble pinocytosis, with the difference that the vesicles are formed from the plasma membranes of two cells. At no time, however, is the sperm as a whole engulfed and brought to the interior of the egg within a large vesicle.  相似文献   

3.
In the previous paper the structure of the acrosomal region of the spermatozoon was described. The present paper describes the changes which this region undergoes during passage through the vitelline membrane. The material used consisted of moderately polyspermic eggs of Hydroides hexagonus, osmium-fixed usually 9 seconds after insemination. There are essentially four major changes in the acrosome during passage of the sperm head through the vitelline membrane. First, the acrosome breaks open apically by a kind of dehiscence which results in the formation of a well defined orifice. Around the lips of the orifice the edges of the plasma and acrosomal membranes are then found to be fused to form a continuous membranous sheet. Second, the walls of the acrosomal vesicle are completely everted, and this appears to be the means by which the apex of the sperm head is moved through the vitelline membrane. The lip of the orifice comes to lie deeper and deeper within the vitelline membrane. At the same time the lip itself is made up of constantly changing material as first the material of the outer zone and then that of the intermediate zone everts. One is reminded of the lip of an amphibian blastopore, which during gastrulation maintains its morphological identity as a lip but is nevertheless made up of constantly changing cells, with constantly changing outline and even constantly changing position. Third, the large acrosomal granule rapidly disappears. This disappearance is closely correlated with a corresponding disappearance of a part of the principal material of the vitelline membrane from before it, and the suggestion is made that the acrosomal granule is the source of the lysin which dissolves this part of the vitelline membrane. Fourth, in the inner zone the fifteen or so short tubular invaginations of the acrosomal membrane, present in the normal unreacted spermatozoon, lengthen considerably to become a tuft of acrosomal tubules. These tubules are the first structures of the advancing sperm head to touch the plasma membrane of the egg. It is notable that the surface of the acrosomal tubules which once faced into the closed acrosomal cavity becomes the first part of the sperm plasma membrane to meet the plasma membrane of the egg. The acrosomal tubules of Hydroides, which arise simply by lengthening of already existing shorter tubules, are considered to represent the acrosome filaments of other species.  相似文献   

4.
The external and cytoplasmic surfaces of the sea urchin egg at fertilization have been examined with the scanning electron microscope (SEM). The outside events were documented by glueing eggs to polylysine coated glass plates, adding sperm and fixing rapidly. To reveal the inner aspects of the surface as the sperm travels through it to reach the egg cytoplasm, the fertilized egg surface was isolated in 0.3 M KC1, 0.35 M glycine, 2 mM MgCl2, 2 mM EGTA, pH 7.5, glued onto a polylysine-coated plate and processed for the SEM. The events of spermatozoon attachment, membrane fusion, sperm entry, rotation and detachment into the egg cytoplasm as well as the associated cortical changes are described. The egg cortex is revealed to be a uniform network of fibrous bundles.The spermatozoon initially attaches to the egg surface by the acrosomal filament. As membrane fusion occurs between the gametes, the plasma membrane of the egg engulfs the sperm, the cortical granules start to discharge and a spreading surface deformation, possibly caused by a cortical contraction, is initiated. The perpendicularly entering spermatozoon is surrounded by a cluster of elongate microvilli which appear to have 235 nm vesicles associated with their bases. The sperm is prevented by the cortex from directly entering the egg cytoplasm and lies upon the egg surface between the plasma membrane and the matrix of cortical fibers. It is subsequently rotated additionally to enter the egg cytoplasm with the posterior end first. A scar is left in the cortex where the spermatozoon penetrated. The egg cortex is shown to consist of 50–200 nm uniformly arranged fibers, and its thickness ranges from 0.2 to 0.5 μm. It is speculated that this structure may be contractile.  相似文献   

5.
Sea urchin gametes predominate in molecular studies of fertilization, yet relatively little is known of the subcellular aspects of sperm entry in this group. Accordingly, it seemed desirable to make a detailed examination of sperm entry phenomena in sea urchins with the electron microscope. Gametes of the sea urchins Arbacia punctulata and Lytechinus variegatus were used in this study. Samples of eggs containing 2 to 8 per cent oocytes were selected and fixed with osmium tetroxide in sea water at various intervals after insemination. Fixed specimens were embedded in Epon 812, sectioned, and examined with an electron microscope. An apical vesicle was observed at the anterior end of the acrosome. The presence of this structure, together with other observations, suggested that initiation of the acrosome reaction in sea urchin sperm involves dehiscence of the acrosomal region with the subsequent release of the acrosomal granule. Contact and initial fusion of gamete membranes was observed in mature eggs and oocytes and invariably involved the extended acrosomal tubule of the spermatozoon. Only one spermatozoon normally enters the mature egg. The probability of locating such a sperm in ultrathin sections is exceedingly low. Several sperm do normally enter oocytes. Consequently, observations of sperm entry were primarily restricted to the latter. The manner of sperm entry into oocytes did not resemble phagocytosis. Organelles of the spermatozoon were progressively divested of their plasma membrane as they entered the ground cytoplasm of the oocyte fertilization cone. Initiation of the acrosome reaction, contact and initial fusion of gamete membranes, and sperm entry into oocytes of sea urchins conform to the Hydroides-Saccoglossus pattern of early fertilization events as described by Colwin and Colwin (13).  相似文献   

6.
Summary Association of spermatozoa with blastomeres removed from the egg envelope was studied in order to investigate sperm membrane behavior under circumstances unlike those attending fertilization of normal envelope-enclosed eggs. Under the altered circumstances all parts of the surface of the sperm cell were afforded the opportunity of meeting blastomere plasma membrane. Nevertheless, in each case the spermatozoon first became activated, an acrosomal tubule formed, and it was this organelle alone which fused and established continuity with the blastomere plasma membrane. This behavior of the spermatozoon with respect to the denuded blastomere parallels the behavior of the sperm cell with respect to the envelope-enclosed egg at fertilization. Since the sperm cell behaves so similarly in two situations which are so different with respect to what the spermatozoon encounters, this behavior is considered to reflect the inherent nature of the spermatozoon, and analysis of this behavior in relation to a blastomere is considered to be valid also in relation to an egg during fertilization. It is concluded that membrane fusion, involving the acrosomal tubule of an activated spermatozoon, is the only means by which gametic union is established and that these are obligatory rather than fortuitous features of sperm-egg association in Saccoglossus. It is suggested that these features are probably obligatory also in other species which exhibit this pattern of sperm-egg association.This investigation was supported by Research Grant HD-00007 from the National Institutes of Health, United States Public Health Service.  相似文献   

7.
Guinea pig ovarian oocytes matured in vitro were inseminated in vitro with capacitated, acrosome-reacted spermatozoa and sperm penetration through the zona pellucida and into the egg cytoplasm were examined. Sperm heads passing through the zona pellucida had already lost all their acrosomal elements except for the inner acrosomal membrane and the equatorial segment. It was often observed that the texture of the zona material around the sperm head was distorted, giving the impression that the zona pellucida was parted, at least partially, by a shearing force produced by the sperm head advancing through the zona. When eggs were freed from their zonae pellucidae and inseminated, the acrosome-reacted spermatozoa immediately bound to the egg surfaces and began to fuse with the eggs; whereas the spermatozoa with intact acrosomes failed to do so. Fusion began between the egg plasma membrane and the sperm plasma membrane at the central region of the sperm head. The anterior half of the sperm head was engulfed by the egg in a phagocytic fashion, while its posterior half was incorporated into the egg by a fussion between egg and sperm plasma membranes. Incorporation of the sperm tail into the egg was achieved by fusion between the sperm and egg plasma membranes.  相似文献   

8.
This paper describes in some detail the structure of the acrosomal region of the spermatozoon of Hydroides as a basis for subsequent papers which will deal with the structural changes which this region undergoes during fertilization. The material was osmium-fixed and mild centrifugation was used to aggregate the spermatozoa from collection to final embedding. The studies concern also the acrosomal regions of frozen-thawed sperm prepared by a method which previously had yielded extracts with egg membrane lytic activity. The plasma membrane closely envelops four readily recognizable regions of the spermatozoon: acrosomal, nuclear, mitochondrial, and flagellar. The acrosome consists of an acrosomal vesicle which is bounded by a single continuous membrane, and its periphery is distinguishable into inner, intermediate, and outer zones. The inner and intermediate zones form a pocket into which the narrowed apex of the nucleus intrudes. Granular material adjoins the inner surface of the acrosomal membrane, and this material is characteristically different for each zone. Centrally, the acrosomal vesicle is spanned by an acrosomal granule: its base is at the inner zone and its apex at the outer zone. The apex of the acrosomal granule flares out and touches the acrosomal membrane over a limited area. In this limited area the adjoining granular material of the outer zone is lacking. The acrosomal membrane of the inner zone is invaginated into about fifteen short tubules. The acrosomal membrane of the outer zone is closely surrounded by the plasma membrane. At the apex of the acrosomal region a small apical vesicle is sandwiched between the plasma membrane and the acrosomal membrane. Numerous frozen-thawed specimens and occasional specimens not so treated show acrosomal regions at the apex of which there is a well defined opening or orifice. Around the rim or lip of this orifice plasma and acrosomal membranes may even be fused into a continuum. The evidence indicates that the apical vesicle and the parts of the plasma and acrosomal membranes which surround it constitute a lid, and the rim of this lid constitutes a natural "fracture line" or rim of dehiscence. Should fracture occur, the lid would be removed and the acrosomal vesicle would be open to the exterior.  相似文献   

9.
The relationship between the specific anatomy of tilapia gametes and their function was studied in the sequence of events which follow artifical fertilization. Scanning electron microscopic observations showed that some events of the fertilization process, involving spermatozoon migration through the micropylar canal until reaching the villous plasma membrane of the eggs and its penetration into the egg cytoplasm, occur very rapidly (fractions of a second). However, the spermatozoon tail remains outside for about 1–2 min. Then, following the zygote formation and the elevation of the chorion after its separation from the plasma membrane, numerous sperm cells could be found in the vicinity of the micropyle. This cell mass, which seemed to be trapped by a network of microfilaments, was suggested to be the result of the evacuation of excess sperm cells throughout the micropylar canal. The significance of these results for sperm and egg plasma membrane interaction and for prevention of polyspermy are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Sperm-egg interaction during normal fertilization in the sea urchins, Strongylocentrotus intermedius and Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus, was studied by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Several seconds after insemination, acrosome-reacted spermatozoa were found attached to the surface of the vitelline coat on each egg. Soon, several bulges of the vitelline coat appeared surrounding the fertilizing spermatozoon. These bulges then spread over the surface increasing in number, while they became fewer and disappeared around the sperm head. Thin sections of the bulging areas revealed discharging cortical granules. As the bulging vitelline coat was elevated, the sperm head was incorporated into the perivitelline space, passing through a small hole in the coat that resulted from penetration of the sperm acrosomal process immediately before fusion of the gametes. When the spermatozoon disappeared beneath the fertilization membrane, a hole was left in the membrane and the cortical reaction had finished on the other hemispheric surface. Mechanical removal of the membrane at that time exposed a spermatozoon protruding perpendicularly from the egg plasma membrane surface. The anterior tip of the sperm head was smoothly connected with the egg surface, and neither microvillous projections nor cytoplasmic covering of the egg cytoplasm could be found around the spermatozoon.  相似文献   

11.
ZYGOTE FORMATION IN ASCARIS LUMBRICOIDES (NEMATODA)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Ultrastructural observations of the in utero sperm of Ascaris lumbricoides reveal that it consists of a relatively clear, ameboid anterior region and a conical posterior region containing numerous surface membrane specializations, dense mitochondria, a lipid-like refringent body of variable size, and a dense nucleus which lacks an apparent nuclear envelope. No acrosomal complex was observed. Pseudopods emanating from the anterior cytoplasm make first contact with the primary oocytes and appear to be responsible for the localized removal of the extraneous coat covering the oolemma. Subsequently the gamete membranes interdigitate and finally fuse. Because this pseudopodial action appears similar to that reported for the acrosomal filaments in flagellated sperm, the anterior region of the Ascaris sperm is thought to serve an acrosomal function. Following gamete-membrane fusion, the sperm nucleus acquires a particulate appearance and becomes disorganized. Once inside the oocyte, the sperm cytoplasm consists of dense mitochondria, ribosomes, and vesicles derived from the surface membrane specializations. The refringent body, whose contents possibly contribute to the synthesis of ribosomes, is usually absent by the time the sperm cytoplasm attains a central position in the egg.  相似文献   

12.
Male scale insects of the species Parlatoria oleae Colvée (Homoptera: Coccoidea) produce motile sperm bundles. The bundle is a syncytium consisting of 10 to 20 closely packed, filamentous spermatozoa, which share a common cytoplasm and are enclosed in a common membrane. The individual spermatozoon is not surrounded by a plasma membrane, but is delimited by a scroll-like sheath composed of 45 to 50 microtubules. The microtubules run parallel to the long axis of the spermatozoon and are arranged in a spiral pattern as seen in transection. The outside diameter measures approximately 140 to 220 A and the inside diameter, 70 to 100 A. The spermatozoon is about 300 µ long and tapers gradually from a diameter of approximately 0.3 µ anteriorly to 0.1 µ posteriorly. The anterior half (150 µ) has a threadlike core of chromatin about 0.07 µ in diameter. A homogeneous cytoplasm surrounds the nuclear core and fills the posterior half of the spermatozoon. Neither osmium tetroxide nor glutaraldehyde fixation revealed the presence of a nuclear envelope, acrosomal membranes, mitochondria, flagellum, or centrioles. In spite of the apparent lack of orthodox cell organelles, the spermatozoon is actively motile upon release from the bundle. It exhibits capactiy for motility throughout its entire length. Since the sheath of microtubules is the only structure which extends the full length of the spermatozoon, it probably plays a significant role in spermatozoan motility.  相似文献   

13.
Exocytosis of the sperm acrosome is an obligate precursor to successful egg penetration and subsequent fertilization. In most mammals, acrosomal exocytosis occurs at a precise time, after sperm binding to the zona pellucida of the egg, and is induced by a specific component of the zona pellucida. It may be considered an example of regulated secretion with the acrosome of the sperm analogous to a single secretory vesicle. Monomeric G proteins of the rab3 subfamily, specifically rab3a, have been shown to be important regulators of exocytosis in secretory cells, and we hypothesized that these proteins may regulate acrosomal exocytosis. Using α[32P] GTP binding to Immobilon blotted mouse sperm proteins, the presence of three or more monomeric GTP binding proteins was identified with Mr = 22, 24, and 26 × 103. Alpha[32P] GTP binding could be competed by GTP and GDP, but not GMP, ATP, or ADP. Anti‐peptide antibodies specific for rab3a were used to identify the 24 kDa G protein as rab3a. Using immunocytochemistry, rab3a was localized to the head of acrosome‐intact sperm and was lost during acrosomal exocytosis. It was identified in membrane and cytosolic fractions of sperm with the predominant form being membrane‐bound, and its membrane association did not change upon capacitation. Immunogold labeling and electron microscopy demonstrated a subcellular localization in clusters to the periacrosomal membranes and cytoplasm. These data identify the presence of rab3a in acrosomal membranes of mouse sperm and suggest that rab3a plays a role in the regulation of zona pellucida ‐induced acrosomal exocytosis. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 53:413–421, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Early events in fertilization were studied in Carcinus maenas by in vitro experiments and ultrastructural analysis; some were found to occur in the lumen of ripe ovaries. The acrosome reaction generally conformed to the usual Reptantia Decapoda pattern. However, a prominent membrane system continuous with the nuclear envelope and located close to the base of the acrosome tubule characterized the type of spermatozoon observed in Carcinus maenas. Such complex anatomical connections linking the three parts of the reacted spermatozoon (acrosome tubule, membrane system and nucleus envelope) may be significant in relation to the membrane system's contribution to the acrosome reaction. The outer layer of the everted acrosomal vesicle was found to comprise tubular elements ending in bell-shaped corpuscles, deeply interdigitated with the oolemma microvilli during the establishment of the initial contacts between the reacted spermatozoon and the egg plasma membrane. At the site of contact, the oolemma formed a minute fertilization cone, locally depressed by the acrosome tubule. During these early fertilization events, the nucleus, like the other spermatozoon components, was seen to penetrate the egg coatings first, and later to be located near the oolemma.  相似文献   

15.
Developmental phases surrounding the processes of gametic delivery and fusion were examined ultrastructurally in the reduced megagametophyte of Plumbago zeylanica, which lacks synergids. Gametic delivery occurs at the end of pollen tube growth and results in deposition of two male gametes, a vegetative nucleus, and a limited amount of pollen cytoplasm between the egg and central cell. Discharge of these materials from the tube is accompanied by loss of inner and outer pollen tube plasma membranes, loss of sperm-associated cell wall components, and disruption of the formerly continuous cell wall between the egg and central cell. The dispersion of egg cell wall components directly exposes female reproductive cell membranes to the unfused male gametes and pollen tube without disrupting gametic cell plasma membranes. Presence of unfused sperms within the female gametophyte appears to be a transitory phenomenon, lasting less than 5 min at the end of over 8½ hr of pollen tube growth. At the time of gametic deposition, plasma membranes of unfused sperm cells become directly appressed to plasma membranes of both the egg and central cell. Gametic fusion is initiated by a single fusion event between membranes of participating male and female cells, which is rapidly followed by subsequent, secondary fusion events between the same two cells at different locations along their surface. Gametic fusion results in the transmission of male gamete nuclei with co-transmission of nearly the entire sperm cytoplasmic volume and organellar complement, and it is possible to identify heritable male cytoplasmic organelles within both the incipient zygote and endosperm. Paternally originating plastids may be distinguished from maternal plastids by differences in morphology and staining characteristics, whereas paternal mitochondria may be distinguished from maternal mitochondria by populational differences in mitochondrial size which are statistically significant. Such observations further indicate that transmitted paternal mitochondria seem to remain viable, as judged by their ultrastructural appearance, and are transmitted exclusively by sperm cytoplasm rather than discharged pollen cytoplasm. The presence of anucleate, membrane-bounded cytoplasmic bodies between the egg and central cell are identifiable on the basis of their enclosed organelles and indicate that fragmentation of a small amount of the sperm cytoplasm associated with the vegetative nucleus commonly occurs. The presence and identification of sperm cytoplasmic organelles and associated membranes within female reproductive cells following gametic transmission represents strong evidence in support of the cellular basis of nuclear and cytoplasmic transmission during sexual reproduction in Plumbago.  相似文献   

16.
Fertilization events following coalescence of the gamete plasma membranes and culminating in the formation of the zygote nucleus were investigated by light and electron microscopy in the sea urchin, Arbacia punctulata. Shortly after the spermatozoon passes through the fertilization cone, it rotates approximately 180° and comes to rest lateral to its point of entrance. Concomitantly, the nonperforated nuclear envelope of the sperm nucleus undergoes degeneration followed by dispersal of the sperm chromatin and development of the pronuclear envelope. During this reorganization of the sperm nucleus, the sperm aster is formed. The latter is composed of ooplasmic lamellar structures and fasciles of microtubules. The male pronucleus, sperm mitochondrion, and flagellum accompany the sperm aster during its migration. As the pronuclei encounter one another, the surface of the female pronucleus proximal to the advancing male pronucleus becomes highly convoluted. Subsequently, the formation of the zygote nucleus commences with the fusion of the outer and the inner membranes of the pronuclear envelopes, thereby producing a small internuclear bridge and one continuous, perforated zygote nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

17.
Integration of sperm and egg plasma membrane components at fertilization   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Studies examining the integration of the sperm and egg plasma membranes, subsequent to gamete fusion in the surf clam, Spisula solidissima, were carried out employing the concanavalin A-horseradish peroxidase-diaminobenzidine procedure (Con A-HRP-DAB). When unfertilized Spisula eggs were incubated in Con A, either prior to or after aldehyde fixation and reacted with HRP-DAB, enzymatic precipitate was found associated with the vitelline layer and plasmalemma. The plasma membranes of sperm treated in a similar manner failed to stain. The plasma membranes of fertilized eggs reacted with Con A-HRP-DAB and examined by 1 min postinsemination were associated uniformly with enzymatic precipitate except at sites of sperm incorporation. These portions of unstained plasma membrane were derived from the spermatozoon and delimited the contents of the fertilization cone. From 2 to 4 min postinsemination, HRP-DAB reaction product became associated with the plasma membrane delimiting the fertilization cone. By 4 min postinsemination no difference in staining of the plasma membranes derived from the egg or the sperm (plasmalemma delimiting the fertilization cone) was detected. Evidence is presented suggesting that the acquisition of HRP-DAB reaction product by the former sperm plasmalemma is due to the movement of Con A binding sites from the egg plasma membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Fertilization is the process that leads to the formation of a diploid zygote from two haploid gametes. This is achieved through a complex series of cell-to-cell interactions between a sperm and an egg. The final event of fertilization is the fusion of the gametes’ membranes, which allows the delivery of the sperm genetic material into the egg cytoplasm. In vivo studies in the laboratory mouse have led to the discovery of membrane proteins that are essential for the fusion process in both the sperm and egg. Specifically, the sperm protein Izumo1 was shown to be necessary for normal fertility. Izumo1-deficient spermatozoa fail to fuse with the egg plasma membrane. Izumo1 is a member of the Immunoglobulin Superfamily of proteins, which are known to be involved in cell adhesion. Here, we describe BART97b, a new mouse line with a recessive mutation that displays a fertilization block associated with a failure of sperm fusion. BART97b mutants carry a deletion that inactivates Spaca6, a previously uncharacterized gene expressed in testis. Similar to Izumo1, Spaca6 encodes an immunoglobulin-like protein. We propose that the Spaca6 gene product may, together with Izumo1, mediate sperm fusion by binding an as yet unidentified egg membrane receptor.  相似文献   

19.
Ejaculated spermatozoa must undergo physiological priming as they traverse the female reproductive tract before they can bind to the egg’s extracellular coat, the zona pellucida (ZP), undergo the acrosome reaction, and fertilize the egg. The preparatory changes are the net result of a series of biochemical and functional modifications collectively referred to as capacitation. Accumulated evidence suggests that the event that initiates capacitation is the efflux of cholesterol from the sperm plasma membrane (PM). The efflux increases permeability and fluidity of the sperm PM and causes influx of Ca2+ ions that starts a signaling cascade and result in sperm capacitation. The binding of capacitated spermatozoa to ZP further elevates intrasperm Ca2+ and starts a new signaling cascade which open up Ca2+ channels in the sperm PM and outer acrosomal membrane (OAM) and cause the sperm to undergo acrosomal exocytosis. The hydrolytic action of the acrosomal enzymes released at the site of sperm-egg (zona) binding, along with the hyperactivated beat pattern of the bound spermatozoon, are important factors in directing the sperm to penetrate the ZP and fertilize the egg. The role of Ca2+-signaling in sperm capacitation and induction of the acrosome reaction (acrosomal exocytosis) has been of wide interest. However, the precise mechanism(s) of its action remains elusive. In this article, we intend to highlight data from this and other laboratories on Ca2+ signaling cascades that regulate sperm functions.  相似文献   

20.
The fine structure of the mature sperm of the holothurian, Cucumaria miniata, and the ophiuroid, Ophiopholis aculeata, is described with particular reference to their acrosomal and centriolar satellite complexes, and compared to the sperm of other echinoderms. In Cucumaria, the acrosome is in the form of a diffuse acrosomal vesicle. It is unusual in that it apparently lacks an acrosomal membrane. A membrane separating the acrosomal vesicle from the periacrosomal material may not be equivalent to a typical inner acrosomal membrane. In Ophiopholis, the acrosome is dense, with some internal substructure, and is enclosed by a complete acrosomal membrane. In both species, the acrosome is partially surrounded by an amorphous periacrosomal mass. There is a notable absence of a subacrosomal depression and associated structures as found in other echinoderm sperm. The centriolar satellite complex (CSC) is essentially identical in both species. A reconstruction of the CSC is presented. The CSC consists of nine satellites radiating angularly from the distal centriole, each bifurcating at a dense node before inserting on a marginal ring containing circumferential microtubules. The ring is probably a cytoskeletal element. Immediately below the satellites are nine Y-shaped connectives. connecting each of the axonemal alpha doublets to the flagellar membrane.  相似文献   

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