首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
An earlier paper showed that in Saccoglossus the acrosomal tubule makes contact with the egg plasma membrane. The present paper includes evidence that the sperm and egg plasma membranes fuse to establish the single continuous zygote membrane which, consequently, is a mosaic. Contrary to the general hypothesis of Tyler, pinocytosis or phagocytosis plays no role in zygote formation. Contact between the gametes is actually between two newly exposed surfaces: in the spermatozoon, the surface was formerly the interior of the acrosomal vesicle; in the egg, it was membrane previously covered by the egg envelopes. The concept that all the events of fertilization are mediated by a fertilizin-antifertilizin reaction seems an oversimplification of events actually observed: rather, the evidence indicates that a series of specific biochemical interactions probably would be involved. Gamete membrane fusion permits sperm periacrosomal material to meet the egg cytoplasm; if an activating substance exists in the spermatozoon it probably is periacrosomal rather than acrosomal in origin. The contents of the acrosome are expended in the process of delivering the sperm plasma membrane to the egg plasma membrane. After these membranes coalesce, the sperm nucleus and other internal sperm structures move into the egg cytoplasm.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Morphological studies on the gametes and entry of the spermatozoan into the egg of the zebra danio, Brachydanio rerio, were conducted primarily with scanning electron microscopy. The spermatozoan showed a spherical head, which lacked an acrosome, a midpiece containing several mitochondria, and a flagellum. Observations of the unfertilized egg confirmed and extended prior studies showing a distinct cluster of microvilli on the plasma membrane, identified as the sperm entry site, beneath the inner micropylar aperture (Hart and Donovan, '83). The fertilizing spermatozoan attached to the sperm entry site within 5 seconds of the mixing of a gamete suspension. Binding to the egg microvilli appeared restricted to the equatorial surface of the spermatozoan. Fusion between the plasma membranes of the interacting gametes was followed by the formation of a distinct, nipple-shaped fertilization cone. The sperm head was partially incorporated into the fertilization cone cytoplasm by 60 seconds postinsemination. The incorporation of the entire sperm head, midpiece, and a portion of the flagellum occurred between 1 and 2 minutes. During this time, the fertilization cone shortened and was transformed into a massive, blister-like cytoplasmic swelling. Concurrently, upward movements of the ooplasm resulted in the gradual disappearance of the original depression in the egg surface containing the sperm entry site. The second polar body, fully developed by 10 minutes postinsemination, formed approximately 10-15 microns from the site of sperm penetration. Development of the fertilization cone, formation of the second polar body and exocytosis of cortical granules at the sperm entry site readily occurred in parthenogenetically activated eggs, indicating that these surface rearrangements do not require sperm binding and/or fusion.  相似文献   

4.
At the time of in vivo sperm–egg fusion in the rat, a small region of the oolemma under the head of the fertilizing sperm is observed to be free of microvilli. The microvilli-free region increases in area, and by one hour after sperm–egg contact extends over an area 20–30 μ in circumference and bulges out to form an “incorporation cone” visible by light microscopy. The microvilli-free incorporation cone reaches its maximum size at about two hours after sperm–egg interaction. It soon becomes smaller and has disappeared three to four hours after sperm–oocyte fusion. The cone cytoplasm is characterized by a 0.1 μ zone of thin filaments below the plasma membrane. Cytochalasin-B, 2.5 μg/ml, prevents formation of the cone or destroys the intact cone. It is suggested that micro filaments may be involved in the formation of the incorporation cone.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Summary The apex of the sperm head which has undergone the acrosome reaction comes in contact with the plasma membrane of the ovum. After the entire surface of the inner acrosomal membrane has come into close contact with the plasma membrane of the ovum, the two membranes fuse to form a continuous membrane. All parts of the spermatozoon that are devoid of plasma membrane penetrate into the ooplasm. As the head of the spermatozoon moves deeper into the ooplasm, the chromatin begins to disperse, and the head of spermatozoon is transformed into a large spherical nucleus with low electron density. At a later stage of the transformation, many small vesicles appear around the nucleus and subsequently fuse to form two continuous membranes. These membranes represent the male pronuclear envelope. The condensation of the chromatin occurs in places in the nucleus, so that the male pronucleus is formed. During the course of the formation of the male pronucleus, the subacrosomal rod and tail become detached from the head and disintegrate.The authors are greatly indebted to assoc. Prof. Dr. Osamu Koga for his valuable advices. The authors also wish to thank Mr. Takayuki Mori for his helpful suggestions and technical advices. This investigation was supported by a grant from the Ministry of Education of Japan (156185)  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Sexual reproduction requires the fusion of sperm cell and oocyte during fertilization to produce the diploid zygote. In mammals complex changes in the plasma membrane of the sperm cell are involved in this process. Sperm cells have unusual membranes compared to those of somatic cells. After leaving the testes, sperm cells cease plasma membrane lipid and protein synthesis, and vesicle mediated transport. Biophysical studies reveal that lipids and proteins are organized into lateral regions of the sperm head surface. A delicate reorientation and modification of plasma membrane molecules take place in the female tract when sperm cells are activated by so-called capacitation factors. These surface changes enable the sperm cell to bind to the extra cellular matrix of the egg (zona pellucida, ZP). The ZP primes the sperm cell to initiate the acrosome reaction, which is an exocytotic process that makes available the enzymatic machinery required for sperm penetration through the ZP. After complete penetration the sperm cell meets the plasma membrane of the egg cell (oolemma). A specific set of molecules is involved in a disintegrin-integrin type of anchoring of the two gametes which is completed by fusion of the two gamete plasma membranes. The fertilized egg is activated and zygote formation preludes the development of a new living organism. In this review we focus on the involvement of processes that occur at the sperm plasma membrane in the sequence of events that lead to successful fertilization. For this purpose, dynamics in adhesive and fusion properties, molecular composition and architecture of the sperm plasma membrane, as well as membrane derived signalling are reviewed.  相似文献   

9.
The early events of fertilization that precede and cause activation of an egg have not been fully elucidated. The earliest electrophysiological change in the sea urchin egg is a sperm-evoked increase of the egg's membrane conductance. The resulting depolarization facilitates entry of the fertilizing sperm and precludes the entry of supernumerary sperm. The sequence of the increase in the egg's membrane conductance, gamete membrane fusion, egg activation, and sperm entry, including causal relationships between these events, are not known. This study reports the use of whole egg voltage clamp and loose patch clamp to monitor simultaneously changes of membrane conductance and capacitance at the site of sperm-egg contact. Measurements were made during sperm-egg interactions where sperm entry readily proceeded or was precluded by maintaining the egg's membrane potential either at large, negative values or at positive values. Whenever the sperm evoked an increase of the egg's membrane conductance, that increase initiated abruptly, was localized to the site of sperm attachment, and was accompanied by a simultaneous abrupt increase of the membrane capacitance. This increase of capacitance indicated the establishment of electrical continuity between gametes (possibly fusion of the gametes' plasma membranes). If sperm entry was blocked by large negative membrane potentials, the capacitance cut off rapidly and simultaneously with a decrease of the membrane conductance, indicating that electrical continuity between gametes was disrupted. When sperm entry was precluded by positive membrane potentials, neither conductance nor capacitance increased, indicating that sperm entry was halted before the fusion of membranes. A second, smooth increase of capacitance was associated with the exocytosis of cortical granules near the sperm in eggs that were activated. Electrical continuity between the gametes always preceded activation of the egg, but transient electrical continuity between the gametes alone was not always sufficient to induce activation.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
The ultrastructure of sperm changes and penetration in the egg was studied in the anuran Discoglossus pictus, whose sperm have an acrosome cap with a typical tip, the apical rod. The first stage of the sperm apical rod and acrosome reaction (AR) consists in vesiculation between the plasma membrane and the outer acrosome membrane. The two components of the acrosome cap are released in sequence. The innermost component (component B) is dispersed first. The next acrosome change is the dispersal of the outermost acrosome content (component A). At 30 sec postinsemination, when the loss of component B is first observed, holes are seen in the innermost jelly coat (J1), surrounding the penetrating sperm. Therefore, this acrosome constituent might be related to penetration through the innermost egg investments. At 1 min postinsemination, during sperm penetration into the egg, a halo of finely granular material is observed around the inner acrosome membrane of the spermatozoon, suggesting a role for component A at this stage of penetration. Gamete-binding and fusion take place between D1 (the egg-specific site for sperm interaction) and the perpendicularly oriented sperm. Spermatozoa visualized at their initial interaction (15 sec postinsemination) with the oolemma are undergoing vesiculation. The first interaction is likely to occur between the D1 glycocalyx and the plasma membrane of the hybrid vesicles surrounding the apical rod. As fusion is observed between the internal acrosome membrane and the oolemma, it can be postulated that gametic interaction might be followed by fusion of the latter with the apical rod internal membrane that extends posteriorly into the inner acrosome membrane. Insemination of the outermost jelly layer (J3) dissected out of the egg, and observations of the ultrastructural changes of spermatozoa in this coat, indicate that J3 rather than the vitelline coat (VC) induces the AR. Interestingly, at the late postinsemination stage, VC fibrils are seen crosslinking the inner acrosome membrane. The role of this binding is here discussed. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:323–333, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
An ultrastructural study has been carried out on the interaction of human sperm with zona-free hamster oocytes. Scanning, thin-section, and freeze-fracture electron microscopy were used to examine sperm in the process of contacting and fusing with the egg surface. Microvilli from the oocyte attach to the sperm head at anterior and posterior loci, initial contact often being made with the inner acrosomal membrane. Freeze-fracture study reveals that microvilli specifically contact particle-rich regions of the sperm head surface, and fusion with the oolemma occurs in the equatorial region of the spermatozoon. Intramembranous particle aggregation was observed on the postacrosomal and neck regions of spermatozoa and resulted from glutaraldehyde fixation and glycerolation, since fast freezing of unfixed specimens did not show patching. Counts of intramembranous particles on sperm head plasma membranes showed a reversal of the usual P face/E face ratios for unfixed, fresh sperm, whereas capacitated populations retained the usual particle distributions on P and E faces, even in unfixed, fresh samples. It is suggested that a switching of binding properties of integral proteins may occur during capacitation, resulting in a higher stability of the P-face association in unfixed cells.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
"Capacitation" is a physiological event which alters sperm to permit rapid penetration through oocyte investments and fusion between gametes. Acrosomal "reaction," the physiological release of acrosomal contents, occurs after this facilitating process. In this study, acrosomal "disruption" of guinea pig and rat sperm was achieved in vitro by incubating sperm together with the follicular contents of superovulated mice. The samples contained both "reacted" and "disrupted" sperm. Thin sections of affected sperm revealed rupture and vesiculation of the plasma membrane overlying the acrosome, as well as loss of both the outer acrosomal membrane and the acrosomal content. Freeze-fracture revealed disintegration of the characteristic geometric patterns in regions of the acrosomal and plasma membranes thus disrupted and major modifications in particle distribution in the sperm tail. In the guinea pig, strands of 6–8-nm particles, usually confined to the plasma membrane of the midpiece, which overlies mitochondria, also appeared in the principal piece. Likewise, in rat sperm, bands of similarly small particles formed acute angles throughout the membrane of the principal piece. Compared with the membranes of control preparations, these membrane alterations are apparently a direct consequence of incubation with ovarian follicular contents.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of the present study was to determine the morphological changes that take place in the male and female gametes during in vivo fertilization in the Australian marsupial, the fat-tailed dunnart, Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Plastic sections were cut of sperm and eggs recovered from the oviducts of recently mated individuals, and light microscopy of thick, and transmission EM of thin, sections was carried out. It was found that, before penetration of the zona, the spermatozoon came to lie along the outer surface with its rostral tip forming a depression in the zona substance. During penetration, zona material was packed tightly around the spermatozoon, and no large hole was formed. A spermatozoon within the perivitelline space had made contact with the oolemma by way of its apical tip. In a spermatozoon partly incorporated into the ooplasm, fusion appeared to have taken place between its plasma membrane and that of the oolemma. Mucoid coat material became deposited outside the zona at this time; its existence and/or the release of cortical granule content probably prevented polyspermy. Once inside the egg cytoplasm, the sperm head sometimes travelled a considerable distance before chromatin decondensation occurred. In addition, it appeared to rotate somewhat on its axis at this time. Finally, some membranous structures were found around two condensed sperm heads in the ooplasm, which may have been part of the pronuclear envelope. Thus this study on in vivo fertilization in the dunnart documents, for the first time, some aspects of fertilization in an Australian marsupial as seen with the transmission electron microscope; it indicates a few differences from those previously found for the American opossum.  相似文献   

17.
We have extended the observations of previous transmission electron microscopy studies of sperm-egg fusion to include those of freeze-fracture replicas showing sperm-egg interactions before, during, and following sperm head fusion with the egg membrane. Hamster eggs were incubated with hamster sperm under polyspermic conditions and were observed after a period of 5-30 minutes. After fixation, the eggs and sperm were exposed to filipin, which binds beta-OH-sterols to form visible complexes in freeze-fracture replicas. Filipin can act as a marker for egg plasma membrane wherein it is abundant, while filipin is relatively scarce in the acrosome-reacted hamster sperm membrane, found only in the plasma membrane of the equatorial segment. The earliest sperm-egg interactions are observed between the egg microvilli and the perforatorium and the equatorial segment of the sperm, and the initial fusion between egg and sperm occurs in the vicinity of the equatorial segment. At later stages of fusion involving the postacrosomal segment, a clear line of demarcation is observed between the filipin-rich egg membrane and the filipin-poor sperm postacrosomal segment, suggesting that filipin binding lipids from the egg intercalate into the sperm membrane following membrane fusion. The anterior segment of the sperm does not fuse with the egg but is instead incorporated into a cytoplasmic vesicle derived from both sperm and egg membranes. In this latter step, filipin-sterol complexes are not found in sperm-derived membranes suggesting that there may be barriers to the movement of filipin binding lipids from the egg into these sperm membranes.  相似文献   

18.
The structural aspects of sperm penetration in the rat egg were investigated by electron microscopy. Eggs were recovered at intervals between 8 and 10:30 A.M. from females which had mated during the previous night. The oviducts were flushed with hyaluronidase and the eggs transferred into a 2 per cent osmium tetroxide solution, buffered at pH 7.8. After fixation, the eggs were mounted individually in agar, dehydrated in ethyl alcohol, and embedded in butyl-methyl methacrylate (3:1). The sperm penetrating the egg is covered by a plasma membrane which is present only on the side facing toward the zona pellucida; no membrane is visible on the side facing toward the vitellus. The sperm plasma membrane becomes continuous with the egg plasma membrane and forms a deep fold around the entering sperm. Cross-sections through the sperm midpiece in the perivitelline space show an intact plasma membrane. At the place of entrance, the plasma membrane of the sperm appears to fuse with the egg plasma membrane. After the sperm has penetrated the vitellus, it has no plasma membrane at all. The nuclear membrane is also absent. These observations suggest a new hypothesis for sperm penetration. After the sperm has come to lie on the plasma membrane of the egg, the egg and sperm plasma membranes rupture and then fuse with one another to form a continuous cell membrane over the egg and the outer surface of the sperm. As a result the sperm comes to lie inside the vitellus, leaving its own plasma membrane incorporated into the egg membrane at the surface of the egg.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Ultrastructural studies on sperm-egg interaction at the time of fertilization inLaternula limicola were performed. The temporary-acrosome did not change morphologically while the sperm passed through the egg investments. At the onset of sperm entrance into the egg, however, the temporary-acrosome and mitochondria were eliminated from the sperm. Afterwards the sperm was engulfed by the egg surface without membrane fusion of the gametes. After entry the sperm nucleus was surrounded by four membranes: the plasma membranes of the egg and of the sperm, and the membranes of the sperm nuclear envelope. As the sperm nucleus differentiated into the male pronucleus, the plasma membranes of both the sperm and egg were initially vesiculated, then dispersed into the egg cytoplasm. Finally, the sperm nuclear envelope changed into the male pronuclear membrane accompanying sperm chromatin dispersion.  相似文献   

20.
Sperm incorporation and the formation of the fertilization cone with its associated microvilli were investigated by scanning electron microscopy of eggs denuded of their vitelline layers with dithiothreitol or stripped of their elevating fertilization coats by physical methods. The activity of the elongating microvilli which appear to engulf the entering spermatozoon was recorded in living untreated eggs with time-lapse video microscopy. Following the acrosome reaction, the elongated acrosomal process connects the sperm head to the egg surface. About 15 microvilli adjacent to the attached sperm elongate at a rate of 2.6 μm/min and appear to engulf the sperm head, midpiece, and sperm tail. These elongate microvilli swell to form the fertilization cone (average height, 6.7 ± 2.0 μm) and are resorbed as the sperm tail enters the egg cytoplasm 10 min after insemination. Cytochalasin B, an inhibitor of microfilament motility, completely inhibits the observed egg plasma membrane surface activity in both control and denuded eggs. These results argue for a role of the microfilaments found in the egg cortex and microvilli as necessary for the engulfment of the sperm during incorporation and indicate that cytochalasin interferes with the fertilization process at this site.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号