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1.
In Drosophila, long sperm are favoured in sperm competition based on the length of the female's primary sperm storage organ, the seminal receptacle (SR). This sperm–SR interaction, together with a genetic correlation between the traits, suggests that the coevolution of exaggerated sperm and SR lengths may be driven by Fisherian runaway selection. Here, we explore the costs and benefits of long sperm and SR genotypes, both in the sex that carries them and in the sex that does not. We measured male and female fitness in inbred lines of Drosophila melanogaster derived from four populations previously selected for long sperm, short sperm, long SRs or short SRs. We specifically asked: What are the costs and benefits of long sperm in males and long SRs in females? Furthermore, do genotypes that generate long sperm in males or long SRs in females impose a fitness cost on the opposite sex? Answers to these questions will address whether long sperm are an honest indicator of male fitness, male post‐copulatory success is associated with male precopulatory success, female choice benefits females or is costly, and intragenomic conflict could influence evolution of these traits. We found that both sexes have increased longevity in long sperm and long SR genotypes. Males, but not females, from long SR lines had higher fecundity. Our results suggest that sperm–SR coevolution is facilitated by both increased viability and indirect benefits of long sperm and SRs in both sexes.  相似文献   

2.
H Ryo  K Ito  S Kondo 《Mutation research》1981,83(2):179-190
The frequencies of sex-linked recessive lethal mutations in F1 males after feeding adult male Drosophila melanogaster with 0.25 and 0.5 mM methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) orally for 24 h increased approximately linearly with storage of the treated spermatozoa in females, whereas the number of hits of dominant lethals in the sperm after feeding 0.3 and 0.5 mM MMS increased approximately with the square of the storage time. Chromosome losses and mosaics in F1 males also increased with the dose of MMS to males, but their yields were too low to be analyzed quantitatively, only indicating a slight increase of chromosome loses and a slight decrease of mosaics with the time of storage of sperm. Maternal non-disjunctions (or chromosome losses), detected in F1 males, decreased with the dose of MMS to spermatozoa and their yield decreased with the time of storage of sperm of both MMS-treated and the control groups. A unitary model is proposed to explain the effect of storage on the dominant lethals and recessive lethal mutations.  相似文献   

3.
Sperm commonly compete within females to fertilize ova, but research has focused on short‐term sperm storage: sperm that are maintained in a female for only a few days or weeks before use. In nature, females of many species store sperm for months or years, often during periods of environmental stress, such as cold winters. Here we examine the outcome of sperm competition in the fruit fly Drosophila pseudoobscura, simulating the conditions in which females survive winter. We mated females to two males and then stored the female for up to 120 days at 4°C. We found that the outcome of sperm competition was consistent when sperm from two males was stored for 0, 1 or 30 days, with the last male to mate fathering most of the offspring. However, when females were stored in the cold for 120 days, the last male to mate fathered less than 5% of the offspring. Moreover, when sperm were stored long term the first male fathered almost all offspring even when he carried a meiotic driving sex chromosome that drastically reduces sperm competitive success under short‐term storage conditions. This suggests that long‐term sperm storage can radically alter the outcome of sperm competition.  相似文献   

4.
The bluemouth rockfish, Helicolenus dactylopterus dactylopterus (De la Roche, 1809), is a zygoparous species with internal fertilization. The male urogenital papilla acts as the copulating organ, and the females retain the spermatozoa in their ovaries for up to 10 months. The objective of this study is to extend our knowledge of the mechanisms that allow the sperm to be retained in the ovaries for prolonged periods. To this end, we analyze the histochemical properties of: 1) the epithelium of the testicular sperm duct, 2) the sperm of the males, 3) the internal epithelium of the ovary wall, 4) the ovarian fluid, and 5) the spermatozoa storage crypts of females. The PAS (Periodic acid-Schiff) and bright Coomassie blue positive reactions of the epithelium of the spermatic duct point to the secretion of polysaccharides and proteins that could promote the bundling of the spermatozoa. The internal epithelium of the ovarian wall secretes polysaccharides, protein, and lipid compounds throughout the storage and spawning period. The acid nature of the ovarian fluid during the storage period may maintain the bundling of spermatozoa when they enter the ovary and may also inhibit sperm motility until the moment of fertilization. The polysaccharide granules that come from the cryptal epithelium into the cavity where spermatozoa are maintained may supply them with nutrients for the storage period. The presence of glucosaminoglycans on the surface of the sperm is probably related to the inhibition of spermatic motility produced by the acidic environment. They are absent in the spermatozoa located in the testicular ducts, relatively scarce in those of the duct of the copulating organ, and abundant in those within the intraovarian cryptal structures.  相似文献   

5.
The journey of squid sperm   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Sperm storage is common in internally fertilizing animals, but is also present in several external fertilizers, such as many cephalopods. Cephalopod males attach sperm packets (spermatangia) to female conspecifics during mating. Females of eight externally fertilizing families comprising 25% of cephalopod biodiversity have sperm-storage organs (seminal receptacles) in their buccal area, which are not in direct physical contact with the deposited spermatangia. The mechanism of sperm transmission between the implantation site and the storage organ has remained a major mystery in cephalopod reproductive biology. Here, jumbo squid females covering almost the entire life cycle, from immature to a laboratory spawned female, were used to describe the internal structure of the seminal receptacles and the process of sperm storage. Seminal fluid was present between the spermatangia and seminal receptacles, but absent in regions devoid of seminal receptacles. The sperm cellular component was formed by spermatozoa and round cells. Although spermatozoa were tracked over the buccal membrane of the females to the inner chambers of the seminal receptacles, round cells were not found inside the seminal receptacles, suggesting that spermatozoa are not sucked up by the muscular action of the seminal receptacles. This finding supports the hypothesis that spermatozoa are able to actively migrate over the female skin. Although further experimental support is needed to fully confirm this hypothesis, our findings shed light on the elusive process of sperm storage in many cephalopods, a process that is fundamental for understanding sexual selection in the sea.  相似文献   

6.
Unlike mammals, where the males produce huge quantities of tiny spermatozoa, insects, and Drosophila in particular, exhibit a wide range of reproductive strategies. Sperm gigantism in Drosophila deviates from the rules that normally govern anisogamy, i.e. differences in the size and quantity of male and female gametes. Sperm gigantism has driven anatomical, physiological and cytological adaptations that affect the correlated evolution of the male and female reproductive systems, and has led to the evolution of a new structure, the roller, located between the testis and the seminal vesicle, and to sperm coiling to form pellets. The diversification of sperm strategy is investigated in the light of sexual selection processes that occur in the female genital tract after copulation. These processes, which bias paternity, result from interactions either between spermatozoa from different males, or between the spermatozoa and the environment within the female reproductive tract. In Drosophila, increased sperm size does not confer any reproductive advantage on the male. The evolution of sperm gigantism does not seem to be attributable to competition between spermatozoa from different males, as has been shown to occur in some vertebrate species. Alternative mechanisms, such as interactions between spermatozoa and the female reproductive system, are therefore currently viewed as being more likely explanations. In particular, the impact of sperm size on female reproductive physiology is being investigated to find out whether having large spermatozoa increases the likelihood of male reproductive success. Correlated adaptations of the spermatozoa and female storage organs also seem to be a major factor in determining sperm success, and their role in male-female conflicts is discussed briefly.  相似文献   

7.
The "zipper line" of Drosophila melanogaster and of Drosophila species characterized by giant spermatozoa (D. hydei, D. kanekoi and D. bifurca) was studied by electron microscopy using conventional thin-sections, lectin labeling and freeze-fracture replicas. In cross sections the membrane specializations are located either at the level of the short cistern close to the large mitochondrial derivative where a small tuft of glycocalyx is visible or, in species characterized by long spermatozoa, along a cistern beneath the plasma membrane. In correspondence of such cistern, the plasma membrane exhibits a thick and extended glycocalyx. At this level, as well as at the short tuft of D. melanogaster, alpha-mannose residues were detected. The "zipper" of D. melanogaster consists of rows of intramembrane particles longitudinally disposed along the sperm tail and associated with the external face of the plasma membrane. On the protoplasmatic face a narrow ribbon of transversal grooves is visible. Freeze-fracture replicas have revealed, in the region characterized by extended glycocalyx, the presence of a large ribbon of intramembrane particles disposed in parallel transversal rows, associated with the protoplasmatic membrane face. On the complementary external face a ribbon of parallel transversal grooves was observed. It is suggested that membrane specializations are mechanical devices to protect spermatozoa from torsion and bending in the seminal vesicles and then in the female storage organ.  相似文献   

8.
In Sex Ratio males of D. subobscura Y sperm degenerate. Nevertheless, Sex Ratio males can produce as many offspring as non-Sex Ratio males. In order to find an explanation for the high number of offspring of Sex Ratio males we analysed spermatogenesis and sperm storage in females. Because D. subobscura has two morphs of sperm, short and long sperm, we studied the relationship of sperm heteromorphism to the Sex Ratio trait in this species. Spermatids of both lengths developed simultaneously in the testes. The first mature sperm produced by a young male were nearly all short sperm. This result indicates that short cysts need less time to mature than long cysts. Thus in a given time more short cysts than long cysts can mature. In the testes of Sex Ratio males more short cysts and fewer long cysts were formed than in the tests of non-Sex Ratio males. Thus in a unit time Sex Ratio males can produce as many or more sperm than non-Sex Ratio males. Females mated to Sex Ratio males had more sperm in their storage organs than those which were mated to non-Sex Ratio males. From the transferred sperm females stored selectively more long than short sperm after mating to a Sex Ratio male than after mating to a non-Sex Ratio male. The effect of the high amount of sperm in Sex Ratio males is twofold: the loss of Y sperm is compensated, and probably in nature a second copulation is prevented by the complete filling of the female storage organs. From these results we conclude that the development and persistence of the Sex Ratio trait in natural populations depends on the presence of sperm heteromorphism.  相似文献   

9.
In internally fertilizing species, sperm transfer is not always immediately followed by egg fertilization, and female sperm storage (FSS) may occur. FSS is a phenomenon in which females store sperm in a specialized organ for periods lasting from a few hours to several years, depending on the species. Eusocial hymenopterans (ants, social bees, and social wasps) hold the record for FSS duration. In these species, mating takes place during a single nuptial flight that occurs early in adult life for both sexes; they never mate again. Males die quickly after copulation but survive posthumously as sperm stored in their mates' spermathecae. Reproductive females, also known as queens, have a much longer life expectancy, up to 20 years in some species. Here, we review what is currently known about the molecular adaptations underlying the remarkable FSS capacities in eusocial hymenopterans. Because sperm quality is crucial to the reproductive success of both sexes, we also discuss the mechanisms involved in sperm storage and preservation in the male seminal vesicles prior to ejaculation. Finally, we propose future research directions that should broaden our understanding of this unique biological phenomenon.  相似文献   

10.
D M Neubaum  M F Wolfner 《Genetics》1999,153(2):845-857
Mated females of many animal species store sperm. Sperm storage profoundly influences the number, timing, and paternity of the female's progeny. To investigate mechanisms for sperm storage in Drosophila melanogaster, we generated and analyzed mutations in Acp36DE. Acp36DE is a male seminal fluid protein whose localization in mated females suggested a role in sperm storage. We report that male-derived Acp36DE is essential for efficient sperm storage by females. Acp36DE(1) (null) mutant males produced and transferred normal amounts of sperm and seminal fluid proteins. However, mates of Acp36DE(1) males stored only 15% as many sperm and produced 10% as many adult progeny as control-mated females. Moreover, without Acp36DE, mated females failed to maintain an elevated egg-laying rate and decreased receptivity, behaviors whose persistence (but not initiation) normally depends on the presence of stored sperm. Previous studies suggested that a barrier in the oviduct confines sperm and Acp36DE to a limited area near the storage organs. We show that Acp36DE is not required for barrier formation, but both Acp36DE and the barrier are required for maximal sperm storage. Acp36DE associates tightly with sperm. Our results indicate that Acp36DE is essential for the initial storage of sperm, and that it may also influence the arrangement and retention of stored sperm.  相似文献   

11.
The prophenoloxidase system (proPO-AS) is a primordial constituent of insect innate immunity. Its broad action spectrum, rapid response time, and cytotoxic by-products induced by phenoloxidase (PO) production contribute to the effective clearing of invading pathogens. However, such immune reactions may not be optimal for insect organs that evolved to have mutualistic interactions with non-self-cells. Ant queens are long-lived, but only mate early in adult life and store the sperm in a specialized organ, the spermatheca. They never re-mate so their life-time reproductive success is ultimately sperm-limited, which maintains strong selection for high sperm viability before and after storage. The proPO-AS may therefore be inappropriate for the selective clearing of sexually transmitted infections, as it might also target sperm cells that cannot be replaced.We measured PO enzymatic activity in the sperm storage organs of three ant species before and after mating. Our data show that no PO is produced in the sperm storage organs, relative to other somatic tissues as controls, and that these negative results are not due to non-detection in small volumes as non-immune-relevant catalase activity in single spermatheca fluid samples of both virgin and mated queens was significant. The lack of PO activity in sperm storage organs across three different ant species may represent an evolutionarily conserved adaptation to life-long sperm storage by ant queens. We expect that PO activity will be similarly suppressed in queen spermathecae of other eusocial Hymenoptera (bees and wasps) and, more generally, of insect females that store sperm for long periods.  相似文献   

12.
Luck N  Dejonghe B  Fruchard S  Huguenin S  Joly D 《Genetica》2007,130(3):257-265
Sperm competition is expected to be a driving force in sexual selection. In internally fertilized organisms, it occurs when ejaculates from more than one male are present simultaneously within the female’s reproductive tract. It has been suggested that greater sperm size may improve the competitive ability of sperm, but studies provide contradictory results depending on the species. More recently, the role of females in the evolution of sperm morphology has been pointed out. We investigate here the male and female effects that influence sperm precedence in the giant sperm species, Drosophila bifurca Patterson & Wheeler. Females were mated with two successive males, and the paternity outcomes for both males were analyzed after determining sperm transfer and storage. We found very high values of last male sperm precedence, suggesting a strong interaction between rival sperm. However, the data also indicate high frequencies of removal of the sperm of the first male from the female reproductive tract prior to any interaction with the second male. This implies that successful paternity depends mainly on successful sperm storage. Knowing what happens to the sperm within females appears to be a prerequisite for disentangling post-copulatory sexual interactions between males and females.  相似文献   

13.
《Journal of morphology》2017,278(7):907-918
Sperm storage within the female reproductive tract has been reported as a reproductive strategy in several species of vertebrates and invertebrates. However, the morphological structures that allow for sperm to be stored and kept viable for long periods are relatively unknown in osteichthyes. We use histological and stereological tools to identify and quantify sperm storage structures (spermathecae) in 12 species of viviparous Poeciliidae. We found spermathecae in nine species, six of which exhibit superfetation (the ability of females to simultaneously carry within the ovary two or more broods of embryos at different stages of development). These spermathecae are folds of ovarian tissue that close around spermatozoa. We compared the number and size (volume) of spermathecae between species with and without superfetation. Species that exhibit superfetation had a significantly higher number of spermathecae than species that do not exhibit this reproductive strategy. In addition, we found that the mean volume of spermathecae and total volume of spermathecae present in the ovary are marginally higher in species with superfetation. Our results contribute to the understanding of the morphological structures that allow for sperm storage in viviparous osteichthyes and suggest a positive relationship between superfetation and the capacity of females to store sperm.  相似文献   

14.
Studying sperm motility in marine fish: an overview on the state of the art   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
This contribution reviews existing literature and some new own findings on teleost sperm motility and factors controlling it, emphasizing selected marine species. In marine teleosts with external fertilization (halibut, turbot, sea bass, hake, cod and tuna serving as examples), mainly the osmolality controls sperm motility: movement is activated by transfer from the seminal fluid into sea water, representing a large upward step in osmolality. The exception are flatfishes (such as halibut or turbot) where CO2 is responsible for flagellar immotility in seminal fluid. In all cases, the duration of motility is short and limited to minutes ranges due to partial exhaustion of the ATP energy and to increase of internal ionic concentration as suggested by studies with de‐membranated/ATP reactivated flagellae. In this overview, we compare motility characteristics (percentage of active spermatozoa, velocity, linearity), flagellar waves parameters (wave length and amplitude, number of waves) and energy content (respiration and ATP concentration) within species where these data have been established. All parameters show a rapid decrease after activation; therefore progressive forward movement needed by the sperm to effectively reach the egg surface, is limited to a short initial period following activation. In two species (turbot and sea bass) the rapid decrease of sperm motility is reflected by a corresponding decrease of the fertilizing ability. Exposure to external environments (sea water) at activation also leads to local defects of the sperm flagella posing additional limitations on motility duration. However, minor flagellar damages as well as energetic exhaustion are reversible: after a resting period in a non‐swimming solution at the end of the motility period, spermatozoa can be re‐activated for a second motility period. From these results and from additional data obtained from de‐membranated/ATP re‐activated spermatozoa, a paradigm has been developed which establishes a link between external osmolality (sea water), internal ionic concentration and control of axonemal activity.  相似文献   

15.
All animals are under the constant threat of pathogenic infection. However, little is known regarding the influence of acute infection on sperm viability, particularly in female insects. This information is crucial for our understanding of mating and immune system coevolution, considering that females store sperm and serve as the site of sperm competition. Using the fruitfly, Drosophila melanogaster, we examined the influence of infection on sperm viability and storage. Twenty-four hours after haemocoel inoculation with a pathogen mimic (peptidoglycan, PGN) both sexes exhibited reduced sperm viability, indicating that systemic immune activation played a significant role in gamete survival. Surprisingly, sperm death did not appear to result from a reproductive-immune system trade-off, considering that sperm survived 24 h in vitro once removed from their somatic resources. Instead, our results are most consistent with death owing to immune effector collateral damage. We also examined the potential for sexually transmitted pathogens to influence sperm storage. Females mated with 'infected' males (created by dipping genitalia into a PGN solution) exhibited a higher proportion of empty sperm stores 48 h after mating compared to their controls. Remarkably, these data indicate that females may increase their fitness by removing 'infected' ejaculates from storage over time.  相似文献   

16.
The coordinated introduction of sperm and eggs is a prerequisite of high fertilization efficiency. In Drosophila melanogaster, as in most internally fertilizing animals, mated females store sperm prior to fertilization. Yet the regulation of sperm exit from these storage sites is poorly understood. To test one likely factor that could coordinate gamete availability, we quantified sperm exit from storage in three types of female: genetically matched females that were normal or eggless, and an additional wild-type control. Long-term depletion of sperm stores in normal females and eggless females occurs at similar rates. However, soon after mating, egg presence appears to accelerate the transition from one storage stage to the next. Since male ejaculate components and female factors contribute to sperm depletion, opportunities exist for both cooperation and conflict between the sexes in sperm storage dynamics.  相似文献   

17.
Drosophila females engage in multiple matings [1] [2] [3] [4] even though they can store sperm in specialized organs for most of their life [5]. The existence of sperm competition in Drosophila has been inferred from the proportion of progeny sired by the second male in double-mating experiments [6] [7] [8]. Investigators have used this approach to quantify genetic variation underlying sperm competition [8] [9] [10], to elucidate its genetic basis [11], to identify the dependence of different male competitive ability on the genotype of the females with which they mate [12] and to discern the potential role of sperm competition in species isolation [13] [14]. This approach assumes that the sperm from two males stored in a female compete to fertilize the eggs. The mechanism by which sperm competition is accomplished is still unknown, however. Here, fluorescence microscopy, cytometry, and differently labeled sperm were used to analyze the fate of sperm inside the female's sperm storage organs, to quantify sperm competition, and to assess how closely paternity success corresponds to the appearance and location of the sperm. The results show that the first male's sperm is retained for a shortened period if the female remates, and that the second males that sire more progeny either induce females to store and use more of their sperm or strongly displace resident sperm.  相似文献   

18.
The period of initial sperm storage and use by Drosophila melanogaster females is examined for effects of the seminal fluid enzyme esterase 6. Females mated to males differing in their level of esterase 6 activity were dissected from 5 min to 50 hr after the start of copulation and numbers of sperm contained in the uterus, ventral receptacle and paired spermathecae were counted. Of the 4000–6000 sperm transferred at copulation, about 700 are stored in the receptacle by 4 hr post mating and 400 in the spermathecae by 7 hr. However, sperm are released rapidly from storage organs following these peaks and may be found again in the uterus in numbers up to 100 or more. The rate of sperm release is closely related to the level of esterase 6 activity, suggesting that this seminal fluid enzyme is involved in sperm motility.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of this study was to examine the effect of sperm coating on the survival and penetrating ability of in vitro stored diluted spermatozoa. Bovine semen was collected by means of an artificial vagina connected with a tube containing 5 ml of the commercial Triladyl diluent supplemented with 20% egg yolk and 6.7% glycerol (EYTG). Both EYTG and seminal plasma were removed by centrifugation and the spermatozoa were stored under different in vitro storage conditions. In the first and second experiment, "control" and "coated" spermatozoa were stored in Hepes-TALP (pH 6 and 7) at room temperature. After 4 days of storage, the progressive motility, membrane integrity, mitochondrial membrane potential or DNA integrity of the spermatozoa were evaluated before and after Percoll centrifugation. The in vitro penetration rate of the spermatozoa was examined only after Percoll centrifugation. A significantly (P<0.05) positive influence of sperm coating was observed on the tested sperm characteristics and penetration rate of spermatozoa when they were stored in Hepes-TALP at pH 7, but not at pH 6. In the last experiment, the influence of the storage medium Hepes-TALP (pH 7) or EYTG was investigated on motility, membrane integrity, mitochondrial membrane potential and in vitro penetration potential of "coated" spermatozoa stored at room temperature or at 4 degrees C during 4, 5 and 6 days. After 6 days of storage, a significantly (P<0.05) higher percentage of motile and membrane intact spermatozoa with high mitochondrial membrane potential was obtained in EYTG at both temperatures leading to a significantly higher in vitro penetration rate. These results indicate that sperm coating could preserve sperm characteristics and penetrating capacity of fresh bovine spermatozoa stored in egg yolk containing diluent for up to 6 days.  相似文献   

20.

Background

In the Mediterranean fruit fly (medfly), Ceratitis capitata, a highly invasive agricultural pest species, polyandry, associated with sperm precedence, is a recurrent behaviour in the wild. The absence of tools for the unambiguous discrimination between competing sperm from different males in the complex female reproductive tract has strongly limited the understanding of mechanisms controlling sperm dynamics and use.

Results

Here we use transgenic medfly lines expressing green or red fluorescent proteins in the spermatozoa, which can be easily observed and unambiguously differentiated within the female fertilization chamber. In twice-mated females, one day after the second mating, sperm from the first male appeared to be homogenously distributed all over the distal portion of each alveolus within the fertilization chamber, whereas sperm from the second male were clearly concentrated in the central portion of each alveolus. This distinct stratified sperm distribution was not maintained over time, as green and red sperm appeared homogeneously mixed seven days after the second mating. This dynamic sperm storage pattern is mirrored by the paternal contribution in the progeny of twice-mated females.

Conclusions

Polyandrous medfly females, unlike Drosophila, conserve sperm from two different mates to fertilize their eggs. From an evolutionary point of view, the storage of sperm in a stratified pattern by medfly females may initially favour the fresher ejaculate from the second male. However, as the second male's sperm gradually becomes depleted, the sperm from the first male becomes increasingly available for fertilization. The accumulation of sperm from different males will increase the overall genetic variability of the offspring and will ultimately affect the effective population size. From an applicative point of view, the dynamics of sperm storage and their temporal use by a polyandrous female may have an impact on the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT). Indeed, even if the female's last mate is sterile, an increasing proportion of sperm from a previous mating with a fertile male may contribute to sire viable progeny.
  相似文献   

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