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1.
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   

2.
Motomura  T. 《Protoplasma》1994,178(3-4):97-110
Summary Processes of fertilization and zygote development inFucus distichus were studied by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using anti- tubulin antibody and electron microscopy. Just after plasmogamy, sperm aster formation occurs during migration of a sperm nucleus toward an egg nucleus at the center of cytoplasm. Only sparse microtubules (MTs) exist around the egg nucleus. The sperm aster can be observed till karyogamy, but afterwards vanishes. Accompanying sperm aster formation, cortical MTs which are reticulately arranged develop further in the zygotes. In 4 h-old zygotes, characteristic structures which are composed of fine granular masses and consist of intermixed dense and lighter staining areas appear around the nucleus. These structures cannot be detected with anti- tubulin immunofluorescence microscopy. The two centrioles derived from the sperm separate and migrate to both poles. In 4 h-and 8 h-old zygotes, there are no defined MT foci around the zygote nucleus and MTs radiate from the circumference of it. In 12 h-old zygotes, each centriole has migrated to the poles and derivative centrioles are generated. The fine granular masses also migrate to both poles and finally disappear accompanying the appearance of numerous MTs radiating from the poles. Therefore, two distinct MT foci appear from 12 h onwards. Progressive stages of nuclear division were also examined with electron and immunofluorescence microscopy in 16 h-old zygotes. The sperm chloroplast with an eyespot and the sperm mitochondria with an intercristal tubular structure, which are distinctive from those of egg, can be detected after plasmogamy and karyogamy. The sperm chloroplast is still present in 16 h-old zygotes.  相似文献   

3.
Since the initial discovery of double fertilization in angiosperms in 1898, a number of reports of double fertilization-like events in the genus Ephedra have appeared. Until recently, convincing documentation of double fertilization in Ephedra had not been presented. In Ephedra nevadensis, following entry of a single binucleate sperm cell into the egg cell, one sperm nucleus migrates in a chalazal direction to fuse with the egg nucleus. Contemporaneous with this first fertilization event, the ventral canal nucleus regularly migrates from its initially apical position within the egg cell to a more central position within the egg cytoplasm, where it fuses with a second sperm nucleus. Based on quantitative microspectrofluorometric analysis, occasional supernumerary nuclei within the egg cell (derived by migration through pores in the cell walls between jacket cells and the central cell or egg cell) can be ruled out as participating in the second fertilization event. The evolutionary establishment of double fertilization in Ephedra (or its ancestors) was dependent on a number of specific developmental preconditions: 1) persistence of the ventral canal nucleus (which is degenerate in many groups of nonflowering seed plants) through the time of normal fertilization; 2) regular displacement of the ventral canal nucleus from its initially apical position within the egg cell to a position within the egg cytoplasm where fusion of the egg nucleus with the first sperm nucleus earlier occurred; 3) acquisition of egg-like features by the ventral canal nucleus that allow it to attract and fuse with a sperm nucleus; and 4) consistent entry of a second sperm nucleus into the archegonial cavity to participate in a second fertilization event. Although it cannot be determined definitively whether double fertilization in Ephedra is evolutionarily homologous with double fertilization in flowering plants, comparative evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that double fertilization arose in a common ancestor of the Gnetales and angiosperms.  相似文献   

4.
Nuclear DNA content of male and female gametes of tobacco was determined using 4,6-diamindino-2-phenylindole and quantitative microfluorimetry. Pollen grains are released with generative cells containing 2C DNA. Mitotic division occurs in the pollen tube 8–12 h after germination. The resulting sperm cells have 1C DNA content during pollen tube elongation in the style. Sperm cells deposited in the degenerated synergid have a DNA content between 1C and 2C, indicating that sperm are in S-phase in the synergid. Concomitant with pollen tube arrival, the egg cell increases in DNA quantity from 1C to between 1C and 2C at 48 h after pollination. In the absence of pollination, S-phase in the egg cell is delayed by up to 36 h. Newly formed zygotes contain nuclear DNA concentrations of 4C at karyogamy and remain at 4C until zygote division. Tobacco displays cell fusion after the completion of S-phase, apparently during G2. Failure to achieve an optimized system for in vitro fertilization in Nicotiana may reflect the challenges of achieving cell cycle synchrony in gametes isolated from pollen tubes. Receptive gametes are presumably those that pass through the protracted S-phase, reaching G2 receptivity and cell cycle congruity before fusion.  相似文献   

5.
Sex-possessing organisms perform sexual reproduction, in which gametes from different sexes fuse to produce offspring. In most eukaryotes, one or both sex gametes are motile, and gametes actively approach each other to fuse. However, in flowering plants, the gametes of both sexes lack motility. Two sperm cells (male gametes) that are contained in a pollen grain are recessively delivered via pollen tube elongation. After the pollen tube bursts, sperm cells are released toward the egg and central cells (female gametes) within an ovule (Fig. 1). The precise mechanism of sperm cell movement after the pollen tube bursts remains unknown. Ultimately, one sperm cell fuses with the egg cell and the other one fuses with the central cell, producing an embryo and an endosperm, respectively. Fertilization in which 2 sets of gamete fusion events occur, called double fertilization, has been known for over 100 y. The fact that each morphologically identical sperm cell precisely recognizes its fusion partner strongly suggests that an accurate gamete interaction system(s) exists in flowering plants.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Illustration of the fertilization process in flowering plants. First, each pollen tube accesses an ovule containing egg and central cells. Next, the 2 sperm cells face the female gametes in the ovule after the pollen tube bursts. Finally, each sperm cell simultaneously fuses with either egg or central cell.  相似文献   

6.
The spermatozoa of Phallusia (Ascidia) nigra have an elongated head (approximately 5 m in length) in which a nucleus and a single mitochondrion are located side by side. There is no midpiece. The apex of the head is wedge-shaped. Acrosomal vesicles (approximately 55–65 nm in diameter) and moderately electron-dense material (MEDM) are present between the plasmalemma and the nuclear membranes in the anterior tip of the head. The MEDM occupies a central position and three or four acrosomal vesicles are seen in a line alongside it. The acrosomal vesicles disappear as the sperm makes contact with the surface of the chorion. Gamete fusion most likely occurs between a small process extending from the peripheral margin of the sperm apex and the egg surface, resulting in incorporation of the sperm into the egg from the anterior region of its head.  相似文献   

7.
The reproduction system inSpiranthes sinensis (Orchidaceae), collected at various localities in Japan, was revealed to be of a peculiar new type which is not to be found in other angiosperms. None of generative cell nuclei has been observed to dividede novo throughout the progamic phase, although they do participate in fertilization. Neither fertilization of the generative cell nucleus with the central nucleus nor formation of endosperm occurred in this plant. Although the chromosome number in the developing proembryonic cells numbered 2n=30, exhibiting diploidy, the number of marker chromosomes was equal to the sum of half the number of marker chromosomes of the parental clones. From the results described above, we may conclude that the reproduction system of this species represents a new type of single fertilization (non-double fertilization) between egg cell and sperm cell nuclei caused by the omission of generative cell division and the formation of only one sperm cell nucleus.  相似文献   

8.
Ye XL  Yeung EC  Zee SY 《Planta》2002,215(1):60-66
Fertilization in flowering plants involves the fusion of one sperm with the egg cell and a second sperm with the central cell. In the Nun orchid, Phaius tankervilliae (Aiton) Bl., the pollen tube deposits two sperms in the "cytoplasmic mass" of the degenerating synergid. Initially both sperms stay close together. Soon afterwards, the two sperms undergo migration. The leading sperm migrates towards the central cell, while the other sperm moves laterally towards the egg cell. The degenerated synergid cytoplasmic content fills in the available space between the central cell and the egg cell, forming the actin coronas. Due to the high actin content, the bright fluorescence initially prevents the visualization of cellular details. With the subsequent reduction in fluorescence, actin staining reveals that the two sperms are pear-shaped with pointed tails. As the sperms approach their respective target cells, cellular extensions form near the point of sperm entry in both the egg cell and the central cell. These structures appear to aid in the cell fusion process. The morphological and structural features observed provide evidence that the process of double fertilization requires the active participation of not only the two sperms but also the egg cell and the central cell.  相似文献   

9.
After fertilization, the dormant sperm nucleus undergoes morphological and biochemical transformations leading to the development of a functional nucleus, the male pronucleus. We have investigated the formation of the male pronucleus in a cell-free system consisting of permeabilized sea urchin sperm nuclei incubated in fertilized sea urchin egg extract containing membrane vesicles. The first sperm nuclear alteration in vitro is the disassembly of the sperm nuclear lamina as a result of lamin phosphorylation mediated by egg protein kinase C. The conical sperm nucleus decondenses into a spherical pronucleus in an ATP-dependent manner. The new nuclear envelope (NE) forms by ATP-dependent binding of vesicles to chromatin and GTP-dependent fusion of vesicles to each other. Three cytoplasmic membrane vesicle fractions with distinct biochemical, chromatin-binding and fusion properties, are required for pronuclear envelope assembly. Binding of each fraction to chromatin requires two detergent-resistant lipophilic structures at each pole of the sperm nucleus, which are incorporated into the NE by membrane fusion. Targeting of the bulk of NE vesicles to chromatin is mediated by a lamin B receptor (LBR)-like integral membrane protein. The last step of male pronuclear formation involves nuclear swelling. Nuclear swelling is associated with import of soluble lamin B into the nucleus and growth of the nuclear envelope by fusion of additional vesicles. In the nucleus, lamin B associates with LBR, which apparently tethers the NE to the lamina. Thus male pronuclear envelope assembly in vitro involves a highly ordered series of events. These events are similar to those characterizing the remodeling of somatic and embryonic nuclei transplanted into oocytes. The relationship between sperm nuclear remodeling at fertilization and nuclear remodeling after nuclear transplantation is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Fertilization in the freshwater hydrozoanHydra carnea has been examined by light, scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Sperm penetrate the jelly coat which covers the entire egg surface only at the site of the emission of the polar bodies. The egg surface exhibits a small depression, the so called fertilization pit at this site. Sperm-egg fusion takes place only at the bottom of the fertilization pit.Hydra sperm lack a structurally distinct acrosome and in most of the observed cases, fusion was initiated by contact between the membrane of the lateral part of the sperm head and the egg surfacce. Neither microvilli nor a fertilization cone are formed at the site of gamete fusion. The process of membrane fusion takes only a few seconds and within 1 to 2 min sperm head and midpiece are incorporated in the egg.Electron dense material is released by the egg upon insemination but cortical granule exocytosis does not occur and a fertilization envelope is not formed. The possible polyspermy-preventing mechanisms in hydrozoans are discussed. Hydra eggs can be cut into halves whereupon the egg membranes reseal at the cut edges and the fragments assume a spherical shape. Fragments containing the female pronucleus can be inseminated and exhibit normal cleavage and development. The observation that in such isolated parts the jelly coat will not fuse along the cut edges was used to determine its role in site-specific gamete fusion. These experiments indicate that site-specificity of gamete fusion can be attributed to special membrane properties at the fertilization pit.  相似文献   

11.
The fertilization process in Gnetum is critical to our understanding of the evolution of sexual reproduction within the Gnetales, a monophyletic group of nonfiowering seed plants that are the closest living relatives to flowering plants. Although much is known about the fertilization process in Ephedra, which is basal within the Gnetales, little is known about sexual reproduction in the derived sister groups Gnetum and Welwitschia. Ovules of Gnetum gnemon were collected at various stages after hand pollination and processed for light, fluorescence, and electron microscopy. Approximately 5 d after pollination, pollen tubes reach sexually mature female gametophytes, which are coenocytic. At that time, a binucleate sperm cell is found within each pollen tube. Within 7 d of pollination, double fertilization events occur when each of two sperm nuclei released from a pollen tube fuses with a separate, undifferentiated female nucleus within the free nuclear female gametophyte, which lacks differentiated egg cells. The products of double fertilization are two viable zygotes; endosperm is not formed. The lack of differentiated egg cells in Gnetum gnemon is unparalleled among land plants and the documentation of a regularly occurring process of double fertilization is congruent with the hypothesis that a rudimentary process of double fertilization evolved in a common ancestor of angiosperms and Gnetales.  相似文献   

12.
Serially sectioned embryo sacs of Nicotiana tabacum were examined during fertilization events using transmission electron microscopy. After pollen tube discharge, the outer membrane of the sperm pair is removed, the two sperm cells are deposited in the degenerate synergid and the sperm cells migrate to the chalazal edge of the synergid where gametic fusion occurs. During fertilization, the male cytoplasm, including heritable organelles, is transmitted into the female reproductive cells as shown by: (1) the cytoplasmic confluence of one sperm and the central cell during cellular fusion, (2) the occurrence of sperm mitochondria (distinguished by ultrastructural differences) in the zygote cytoplasm and adjacent to the sperm nucleus, (3) the presence of darkly stained aggregates which are found exclusively in mature sperm cells within the cytoplasm of both female cells soon after cell fusion, and (4) the absence of any large enucleated cytoplasmic bodies containing recognizable organelles outside the zygote or endosperm cells. The infrequent occurrence of plastids in the sperm and the transmission of sperm cytoplasm into the egg during double fertilization provide the cytological basis for occasional biparental plastid inheritance as reported previously in tobacco. Although sperm mitochondria are transmitted into the egg/zygote, their inheritance has not been detected genetically. In one abnormal embryo sac, a pair of sperm cells was released into the cytoplasm of the presumptive zygote. Although pollen tube discharge usually removes the inner pollen-tube plasma membrane containing the two sperm cells, this did not occur in this case. When sperm cells are deposited in a degenerating synergid or outside of a cell, this outer membrane is removed, as it apparently is for fertilization.  相似文献   

13.
The distribution of actin was studied during early events of sheep fertilization by fluorescence microscopy after staining with 7-nitrobenz-2-oxal-1.3 diazole (NBD)-phallacidin and anti-actin antibody and by electron microscopy after heavy meromyosin labelling. Unfertilized and fertilized eggs exhibited a continuous band of fluorescence with both NBD-phallacidin and anti-actin antibody. Unlike in mice, no high concentration of actin overlying the spindle was detected in ovulated sheep oocytes. At the site of sperm head incorporation, the fertilization cone developed above the decondensing male chromatin and was underlined by a submembranous area rich in microfilaments. A similar actin network was observed in the cortex of the second polar body. Cytochalasin D was used to investigate the role of actin during the fertilization process. This drug did not prevent sperm fusion and incorporation but inhibited polar body abstriction and fertilization cone development and retarded sperm tail incorporation. Moreover, in the presence of the drug, the anchorage of the metaphase II spindle at the surface of the egg was destroyed. The role of microfilaments in these early events is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
In flowering plants, two male gametes from a single pollen grain fuse with two female gametes, the egg and central cells, to form the embryo and endosperm, respectively. The question then arises whether the two male gametes fuse randomly with the egg and central cells. We investigated this question using two nearly isogenic maize lines with supernumerary B chromosomes (TB10L18) or without (r-tester). B chromosomes regularly undergo non-disjunction at the second pollen mitosis, producing one sperm cell with zero B chromosomes and one with two. We first confirmed earlier studies showing an excess of transmission of the B chromosomes to the embryo rather than to the endosperm. We then tested the possibility of a directed fertilization. For TB10L18 pollen, we could demonstrate the existence of a size dimorphism between the two sperm cells, correlated to the content in B chromosomes, as detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). However, no directed fusion of B chromosome containing sperm to egg cells could be detected when using in vitro fertilization. The absence of directed fusion in vitro could also be demonstrated for control lines. We conclude that both male gametes have the capacity to fuse with the egg cell in maize, although sexual reproduction results in a preferential transmission of supernumerary B chromosomes.  相似文献   

15.
G. Hause  M. -B. Schröder 《Protoplasma》1987,139(2-3):100-104
Summary Karyogamy during fertilization inTriticale starts about 60 minutes after pollination. It was studied in the egg and the central cell by electron microscopy. The fusion of the sperm cell nuclei with the egg and central cell nuclei begins with nuclear envelope fusion presumably with participation of the endoplasmic reticulum cisternae. Initially, fusion is restricted to small bridges between the nuclei. It is accompanied by the appearance of intracisternal lipid droplets.  相似文献   

16.
The pathway of sperm entry during sea urchin fertilization was analyzed by using sperm covalently labeled with fluorescent and radioactive tracers. Sperm that have been covalently labeled on their surfaces with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) or a radioactive congener, diiodofluorescein isothiocyanate (125IFC), transfer labeled components to the egg that persist throughout early development. In order to study the transfer of sperm components and their fate after fertilization, cytochalasin B-dependent inhibition of fertilization, previously shown to permit the cortical reaction of sea urchin eggs but block sperm pronuclear incorporation, was investigated. Under certain conditions cytochalasin B or D (CB or CD) results in about half of the activated eggs having both the sperm nucleus and the fluorescently labeled sperm components arrested apparently at the level of the egg plasma membrane. This arrest of internalization was reversed by removal of CB or CD, and the sperm derivatives entered the egg. When sperm were labeled noncovalently with ethidium bromide or rhodamine 123, fluorescence was transferred to the egg in the cytochalasin-inhibited state in a fashion similar to that found in normal fertilization; in both cases the sperm fluorescence disappeared within a few minutes of fertilization, due to the repartitioning of the noncovalent dyes into the egg cytoplasm. It is concluded that cytochalasin arrests fertilization at an intermediate step in which the sperm has fused with the egg to achieve cytoplasmic continuity, but in which the subsequent internalization of sperm components is inhibited. After removal of cytochalasins the fluorescent sperm components move from the egg surface to an internal site, a process that can be monitored by time-lapse video microscopy with an image intensifier to permit extended observations of sperm fluorescence. The cytoplasmic location of labeled sperm components was substantiated by autoradiography of early embryos fertilized with 125IFC-labeled sperm; transfer of sperm components to an internal site was seen after fertilization of either sea urchin or mouse eggs. Taken together, the data suggest that the fate of the labeled sperm surface components, as well as that of the sperm nucleus, is to be transferred to the egg cytoplasm, and that this transfer is mediated by the actin-dependent cytoskeleton of the egg.  相似文献   

17.
The surface topography of the rat egg was examined during fertilization in vitro and in vivo. Using phase optics, 348 in vitro fertilized and 50 in vivo fertilized eggs were continuously monitored throughout the 7-hour period of sperm incorporation. A myriad of different surface configurations were seen, with each egg exhibiting one or more of the following changes. A small number of eggs (4–6%) formed surface elevations over the sperm head after its detachment from the flagellum, 15–30 min after sperm-egg fusion; 1 to 1.5 hr after fusion, 40–50% of the eggs produced the so-called incorporation cone, a prominent surface elevation over the decondensing sperm nucleus. The vast majority of eggs (74–82%) formed surface elevations over the proximal tip of the flagellum 2–3 hr after sperm-egg fusion. These had no association with the decondensing sperm nucleus. A few eggs (11–12%) exhibited multiple protrusions that were distributed randomly about the egg surface, whereas 14–20% did not manifest any surface elevations and remained spherical throughout the sperm incorporation period. Regardless of the type of surface change, all of the eggs resumed a spherical shape by the time sperm incorporation was complete. These observations are in contrast to the conclusions by previous authors that formation of the so-called incorporation cone over the decondensing sperm nucleus is a ubiquitous event.  相似文献   

18.
In marine invertebrates that spawn by simply releasing their gametes into the water (free-spawning), fertilization success likely is often limited by low sperm concentrations, due to dispersion of mates and dispersal of gametes by water movements. Production of large, low density eggs might be advantageous when sperm concentrations consistently are low, because large target size might increase egg/sperm encounters, and more low than high density eggs could be produced per clutch. Although average fertilization success in the labrid Thalassoma bifasciatum is 95% in both group spawns (in which multiple males compete for fertilizations by producing large quantities of sperm) and pair (mono-male) spawns, it is slightly lower in pair spawns, due to low level sperm limitation that arises because pair-spawning males release near the minimum number of sperm necessary for maximum fertilization. I examined whether variation in egg size and content in T. bifasciatum and other free-spawning fishes is related to variation in spawning mode, to assess whether compensatory production of large, low-density eggs might be contributing to high fertilization success in pair spawns. I found no difference between the volume or density of eggs of (1) pair- and group-spawning females of T. bifasciatum, or (2) pair-and group-spawning congeneric species of labrids, scarids, and serranids, or (3) labrids and scarids with vigorous, rapid spawning movements (which could turbulently diffuse gamete clouds) and those with slow movements. Further, egg density does not decline with increasing egg volume among those fishes. Assuming that egg size can affect fertilization success, then sperm limitation seems unlikely to represent a significant problem for pair-spawning T. bifasciatum, probably because mates place their vents close together during gamete release. The situation regarding sperm limitation in other fishes, and effects of environmentally generated water turbulence on it, are less clear. Interspecific variation in the size and content of these fishes' eggs may relate to provisioning of offspring for different larval life-histories.  相似文献   

19.
A fundamental problem in biology is to understand how fertilization initiates reproductive development. Higher plant reproduction is unique because two fertilization events are required for sexual reproduction. First, a sperm must fuse with the egg to form an embryo. A second sperm must then fuse with the adjacent central cell nucleus that replicates to form an endosperm, which is the support tissue required for embryo and/or seedling development. Here, we report cloning of the Arabidopsis FERTILIZATION-INDEPENDENT ENDOSPERM (FIE) gene. The FIE protein is a homolog of the WD motif-containing Polycomb proteins from Drosophila and mammals. These proteins function as repressors of homeotic genes. A female gametophyte with a loss-of-function allele of fie undergoes replication of the central cell nucleus and initiates endosperm development without fertilization. These results suggest that the FIE Polycomb protein functions to suppress a critical aspect of early plant reproduction, namely, endosperm development, until fertilization occurs.  相似文献   

20.
Summary In the present study, we studied changes in organellar DNA in the sperm cells of maturing pollen ofPelargonium zonale, a plant typical to exhibit biparental inheritance, by fluorescence microscopy after staining with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and by immunogold electron microscopy using anti-DNA antibody. Fluorescence intensities of DAPI-stained plastid nuclei in generative and sperm cells at various developmental stages were quantified with a video-intensified microscope photon counting system (VIMPCS). Results indicated that the amount of DNA per plastid in generative cells increased gradually during pollen development and reached a maximum value (about 70 T per plastid; 1 T represents the amount of DNA in a particle of T4 phage) in young sperm cells at 5 days before flowering. However, the DNA content of plastids was subsequently reduced to about 20% of the maximum value on the day of flowering. Moreover, the DNA content of the plastid further decreased to 4% of the maximum value when pollen grains were cultured for 6 h in germination medium. In contrast, the amount of DNA per mitochondrion did not decrease significantly around the flowering day. Similar results were also obtained by immunogold electron microscopy using anti-DNA antibody. The density of gold particles on plastids decreased during pollen maturation whereas labelling density on mitochondria remained relatively constant. The number of plastids and mitochondria per generative cell or per pair of sperm cells did not change significantly, indicating that the segregation of DNA by plastid division was not responsible for the decrease in the amount of DNA per plastid. These results indicate that the plastid DNA is preferentially degraded, but the mitochondrial DNA is preserved, in the sperm cells ofP. zonale. While the plastid DNA of the sperm cells decreased before fertilization, it was also suggested that the low DNA contents that remain in the plastids of the sperm cells are enough to account for the biparental inheritance of plastids inP. zonale.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - VIMPCS video-intensified microscope photon counting system  相似文献   

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