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1.
Differentiating oocytes and associated follicle cells of two species of amphineurans (Mollusca) Mopalia muscosa and Chaetopleura apiculata have been studied by techniques of light and electron microscopy. In addition to the regularly occurring organelles, the ooplasm of young oocytes contains large, randomly situated, basophilic regions. These regions are not demonstrable in mature eggs. As oocytes differentiate, lipid, pigment and protein-carbohydrate yolk bodies accumulate within the ooplasm. Concomitant with the appearance of pigment and the protein carbohydrate containing yolk bodies, the saccules of the Golgi complex become filled with a dense material. Associated with the Golgi complex are cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum which are filled with an electron opaque substance which is thought to be composed of protein synthesized by this organelle. That portion of the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum facing the Golgi complex shows evaginations. These evaginations are thought to finalize into protein containing vesicles that subsequently fuse with the Golgi complex. Thus, the Golgi complex in these oocytes might serve as a center for packaging and concentrating the protein used in the construction of the protein containing pigment or protein-carbohydrate yolk bodies. The suggestion is made that the Golgi complex may also synthesize the carbohydrate portion of the formentioned yolk bodies. In an adnuclear position in young oocytes are some acid mucopolysaccharide containing vacuolar bodies. In mature eggs, these structures are found within the peripheral ooplasm and we have referred to them as cortical granules. There is no alteration of these cortical granules during sperm activation.  相似文献   

2.
Morphological changes in the growing and maturing oocytes of Patiria ( Asterina ) pectinifero were studied by electron microscopy. Oogenesis is of the solitary type. An extensive system of rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi complex (GC) develops in the ooplasm forming the cortical, yolk and secretory granules in its peripheral regions. The contents of the latter granules are released from the oocyte and form the vitelline membrane. At early stages of oogenesis, extensive multiplication of mitochondria results in formation of a large aggregate of these organelles in the perinuclear cytoplasm ("yolk nucleus"). After maturation of full grown oocytes has been induced by 1-methyladenine, the membranous cell structures are rapidly rearranged: vast aggregates of ER cisternae in the surface cytoplasm layer and single ER cisternae among yolk granules are disintegrated to small vesicles; the GC is reduced. These processes are suggested to be somehow related to changes in hydration of the cytoplasm and in rigidity of its surface layer. In maturing oocytes, the yolk granules form characteristic linear rows, trabeculae, traversing the cytoplasm and their boundary membranes fuse in zones of contact. Some granules are converted to multivesicular bodies, thus suggesting the activation of hydrolytic enzymes that form part of the yolk in echinoderms.  相似文献   

3.
In the annelid Enchytraeus albidus the ovary is composed of packets containing eight synchronously developing oocytes. Each oocyte in the packet is connected, via a bridge, to a common cytoplasmic mass. Developmental synchrony of oocytes within individual packets is probably related to the ooplasmic continuity. The young previtellogenic oocyte contains many polysomes, a few cisternae of smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum, small Golgi complexes, and mitochondria. Many of the mitochondria are dumbbell-shaped and may thus represent division stages. Vitellogenesis is marked by the appearance of peripherally located lipid yolk and small, densely staining granules scattered throughout the ooplasm. There is an increase of smooth endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and enlarged Golgi elements. Small multivesicular-like bodies, the early stages of developing yolk, are derived from the Golgi complex. The mature yolk sphere is bipartite and consists of (a) a variable number of dense spheres, the core bodies, which are produced in the ooplasm by the Golgi complex and which become embedded in (b) a dense matrix. The electron opaque tracer, horseradish peroxidase is incorporated into the oocyte and deposited in the matrix suggesting that this component of the yolk sphere is obtained by micropinocytosis. Enzyme digestions and various cytochemical techniques suggest that the core bodies are rich in carbohydrate, probably as glyco- or mucoproteins, and that the matrix is rich in lipid.  相似文献   

4.
The ultrastructural features of oocyte differentiation were studied in the marine triclad Cercyra hastata. Oocytes at several stages of maturation, each surrounded by follicle cell projections, are present within each of the two ovaries. A pre-vitellogenic and a vitellogenic stage have been detected in the oogenesis of C. hastata. The pre-vitellogenic stage is mainly characterized by an increase in the nuclear and nucleolar volume and activity, and the appearance and development of cortical granule precursors which are elaborated by the Golgi complex. In early phases of the vitellogenic stage, intense delamination and blebbing of the nuclear envelope occurs which probably contributes to an increase in number of cytoplasmic membranes and to transfer of nuclear material to the cytoplasm. The rough endoplasmic reticulum is extensively developed and often assumes a ‘whorl’ array. Several areas of yolk precursor formation appear in the whorls. Numerous 2–5 μm protein yolk globules are subsequently formed which appear surrounded by a double membrane (cisternae of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum) and become randomly distributed throughout the cytoplasm of mature oocytes. The peripheral ooplasm is occupied by a monolayer of electron-dense cortical granules. Finally, the evolutionary significance of the autosynthetic mechanism of yolk production is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Light and electron microscope studies were made on harvestman oocytes during the course of their origin, differentiation, and vitellogenesis. The germ cells appear to originate from the ovarian epithelium. They subsequently migrate to the outer surface of the epithelium, where they remain attached often by means of stalk cells which suspend them in the hemocoel during oogenesis. The “Balbiani bodies,” “yolk nuclei,” or “nuage” constitute a prominent feature of young, previtellogenic oocytes, and take the form of large, but variable sizes of electron-dense cytoplasmic aggregates with small fibrogranular components. The cytoplasmic aggregates fragment and disperse, and cannot be detected in vitellogenic oocytes. The young oocytes become surrounded by a vitelline envelope that appears to represent a secretory product of the oocyte. The previtellogenic oocytes are impermeable to horseradish peroxidase under both in vivo and in vitro conditions. In addition to mitochondria, dictyosomes, and abundant ribosomes, the ooplasm of the previtellogenic oocyte acquires both vesicular and lamellar forms of the rough-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum. In many areas, a dense homogeneous product appears within the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum and represents nascent yolk protein synthesized by the oocyte during early stages of vitellogenesis. Later in vitellogenesis, the oocyte becomes permeable to horseradish peroxidase under both in vivo and in vitro conditions. This change is associated with a massive process of micropinocytosis which is reflected in the presence of large numbers of vesicles of variable form and structure in the cortical ooplasm. Both spherical and tubular vesicles are present, as are coated and uncoated vesicles. Stages in the fusion of the vesicles with each other and with developing yolk platelets are illustrated. In the harvester oocytes, vitellogenesis is a process that involves both autosynthetic and heterosynthetic mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
An analysis of differentiating oocytes of the gastropod, Ilyanassa obsoleta, has been made by techniques of light and electron microscopy. Early previtellogenic oocytes are limited by a smooth surfaced oolemma and are associated with each other by maculae adhaerentes. Previtellogenic oocytes are also distinguished by a large nucleus containing randomly dispersed aggregates of chromatin. Within the ooplasm are Golgi complexes, mitochondria and a few cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum. When vitellogenesis begins, the oolemma becomes morphologically specialized by the formation of microvilli. One also notices an increase in the number of organelles and inclusions such as lipid droplets. During vitellogenesis there is a dilation of the saccules of the Golgi complexes and cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum. Associated with the Golgi complexes are small protein-carbohydrate yolk precursors encompassed by a membrane. These increase in size by fusing with each other. The “mature” yolk body is a membrane-bounded structure with a central striated core and a granular periphery. At maturity a major portion of the ooplasmic constituents such as as mitochondria and lipid droplets occupy the animal region while the bulk of the population of yolk bodies are situated in the vegetal hemisphere. The follicle cells incompletely encompass the developing oocyte. In addition to the regularly occurring organelles, follicle cells are characterized by the presence of large quantities of rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes whose saccules are filled with a dense substance. Associated with the Golgi saccules are secretory droplets of varied size. Amongst the differentiating oocytes and follicle cells are Leydig cells. These cells are characterized by a large vacuole containing glycogen. A possible function for the follicle and Leydig cells is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Electron microscope studies on the oocytes of several crustacean species demonstrate that the protein yolk arises within vesicular and lamellar forms of the rough-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum. The vesicular form of the endoplasmic reticulum may have its origin from a blebbing process of the outer layer of the nuclear envelope. Disc-shaped granules, representing precursor elements of the yolk granules, appear within the vesicular and lamellar profiles of endoplasmic reticulum. Autoradiographic results suggest that the ribosomes attached to the endoplasmic reticulum take part in the biosynthesis of yolk proteins. Numerous disc-shaped granules accumulate within the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum, but eventually they undergo a transformation into a finely granular yolk granule. Thus, both the origin and growth of protein yolk granules occur within membranes constituting the endoplasmic reticulum. The results provide evidence that intra-ooplasmic synthesis of yolk protein occurs in these oocytes.This investigation was supported by research grants (HD-00699; GM-09229) and a Career Development Award (GM-11,524) from the National Institutes of Health, U.S. Public Health Service.  相似文献   

8.
东方扁虾卵子发生的超微结构   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
根据卵细胞的形态、内部结构特征及卵母细胞与滤泡细胞之间的关系,东方扁虾的卵子发生可划分为卵原细胞、卵黄发生前卵母细胞、卵黄发生卵母细胞和成熟卵母细胞等四个时期。卵原细胞胞质稀少,胞器以滑面内质网为主。卵黄发生前卵母细胞核明显膨大,特称为生发泡;在靠近核外膜的胞质中可观察到核仁外排物。卵黄发生卵母细胞逐渐为滤泡细胞所包围;卵黄合成旺盛,胞质中因而形成并积累了越来越多的卵黄粒。东方扁虾卵母细胞的卵黄发生是二源的。游离型核糖体率先参与内源性卵黄合成形成无膜卵黄粒。粗面内质网是内源性卵黄形成的主要胞器。滑面内质网、线粒体和溶酶体以多种方式活跃地参与卵黄粒形成。卵周隙内的外源性物质有两个来源:滤泡细胞的合成产物和血淋巴携带、转运的卵黄蛋白前体物。这些外源性物质主要通过质膜的微吞饮作用和微绒毛的吸收作用这两种方式进入卵母细胞,进而形成外源性卵黄。内源性和外源性的卵黄物质共同参与成熟卵母细胞中富含髓样小体的卵黄粒的形成。卵壳的形成和微绒毛的回缩被认为是东方扁虾卵母细胞成熟的形态学标志。    相似文献   

9.
In a hydrozoan jellyfish, the female gonad is differentiated from a specialized region of the epidermis near the manubrium. Changes in the oocytes during growth and vitellogenesis are described as observed with electron microscopic and cytochemical techniques. Three major types of yolk are formed; these include lipid, glycogen, and membrane-bound granules consisting of both protein and carbohydrate. The latter first appear evident within vesicular and cisternal elements of the numerous Golgi complexes. The orientation and structural variations noted between the endoplasmic reticulum and forming face of the Golgi complexes suggest that the protein component of the yolk granules may be transferred from the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi complex where it is joined to carbohydrate perhaps synthesized by the Golgi complexes. Stages in the release of the precursor yolk material sequestered in cisternal elements of the Golgi complexes are illustrated. The presence of coated and uncoated vesicles in the Golgi regions and their possible role in intracellular transport are described and discussed. The presence and possible method of morphogenesis of vesiculate yolk bodies are also described. What appear to represent invaginations of the oolemma extend into the ooplasm and display a special orientation with respect to lamellae of the rough-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum. Intraooplasmic synthesis appears to constitute the major pathway for protein-carbohydrate yolk deposition.  相似文献   

10.
《Journal of morphology》2017,278(1):50-61
Previtellogenic and vitellogenic oocytes in ovarian follicles from cultured Siberian sturgeon Acipenser baerii were examined. In previtellogenic oocytes, granular and homogeneous zones in the cytoplasm (the ooplasm) are distinguished. Material of nuclear origin, rough endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi complexes, complexes of mitochondria with cement and round bodies are numerous in the granular ooplasm. In vitellogenic oocytes, the ooplasm comprises three zones: perinuclear area, endoplasm and periplasm. The endoplasm contains yolk platelets, lipid droplets, and aggregations of mitochondria and granules immersed in amorphous material. In the nucleoplasm, lampbrush chromosomes, nucleoli, and two types of nuclear bodies are present. The first type of nuclear bodies is initially composed of fibrillar threads only. Their ultrastructure subsequently changes and they contain threads and medium electron dense material. The second type of nuclear bodies is only composed of electron dense particles. All nuclear bodies impregnate with silver, stain with propidium iodide, and are DAPI‐negative. Their possible role is discussed. All oocytes are surrounded by follicular cells and a basal lamina which is covered by thecal cells. Egg envelopes are not present in previtellogenic oocytes. In vitellogenic oocytes, the plasma membrane (the oolemma) is covered by three envelopes: vitelline envelope, chorion, and extrachorion. Vitelline envelope comprises four sublayers: filamentous layer, trabecular layer 2 (t2), homogeneous layer, and trabecular layer 1 (t1). In the chorion, porous layer 1 and porous layer 2 are distinguished in most voluminous examined oocytes. Three micropylar cells that are necessary for the formation of micropyles are present between follicular cells at the animal hemisphere. J. Morphol. 278:50–61, 2017. ©© 2016 Wiley Periodicals,Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Oocyte differentiation in the polyclad turbellarian Prostheceraeus floridanus has been examined to determine the nature of oogenesis in a primitive spiralian. The process has been divided into five stages. (1) The early oocyte: This stage is characterized by a large germinal vesicle surrounded by dense granular material associated with the nuclear pores and with mitochondria. (2) The vesicle stage: The endoplasmic reticulum is organized into sheets which often contain dense particles. Vesicles are found in clusters in the cytoplasm, some of which are revealed to be lysosomes by treatment with the Gomori acid phosphatase medium. (3) Cortical granule formation: Cortical granules are formed by the fusion of filled Golgi vasuoles which have been released from the Golgi saccules. The association between the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi suggests that protein is synthesized in the ER and transferred to the Golgi where polysaccharides are added to form nascent cortical granules. (4) Yolk synthesis: After a large number of cortical granules are synthesized, yolk bodies appear. They originate as small membrane-bound vesicles containing flocculent material which subsequently increase in size and become more compact. Connections between the forming yolk bodies and the endoplasmic reticulum indicate that yolk synthesis occurs in the ER. (5) Mature egg: In the final stage, the cortical granules move to the periphery and yolk platelets and glycogen fill the egg. At no time is there any evidence of uptake of macromolecules at the oocyte surface. Except for occasional desmosomes between early oocytes, no membrane specialization or cell associations are seen throughout oogenesis. Each oocyte develops as an independent entity, a conclusion supported by the lack of an organized ovary.  相似文献   

12.
Swiatek P 《Tissue & cell》2006,38(4):263-270
By the end of previtellogenesis, the oocytes of Glossiphonia heteroclita gradually protrude into the ovary cavity. As a result they lose contact with the ovary cord (which begins to degenerate) and float freely within the hemocoelomic fluid. The oocyte's ooplasm is rich in numerous well-developed Golgi complexes showing high secretory activity, normal and transforming mitochondria, cisternae of rER and vast amounts of ribosomes. The transforming mitochondria become small lipid droplets as vitellogenesis progresses. The oolemma forms microvilli, numerous coated pits and vesicles occur at the base of the microvilli, and the first yolk spheres appear in the peripheral ooplasm. A mixed mechanism of vitellogenesis is suggested. The eggs are covered by a thin vitelline envelope with microvilli projecting through it. The envelope is formed by the oocyte. The vitelline envelope is produced by exocytosis of vesicles containing two kinds of material, one of which is electron-dense and seems not to participate in envelope formation. The cortical ooplasm of fully grown oocytes contains many cytoskeletal elements (F-actin) and numerous membrane-bound vesicles filled with stratified content. Those vesicles probably are cortical granules. The follicle cells surrounding growing oocytes have the following features: (1) they do not lie on a basal lamina; (2) their plasma membrane folds deeply, forming invaginations which eventually seem to form channels throughout their cytoplasm; (3) the plasma membrane facing the ovary lumen is lined with a layer of dense material; and (4) the plasma membrane facing the oocyte forms thin projections which intermingle with the oocyte microvilli. In late oogenesis, the follicle cells detach from the oocytes and degenerate in the ovary lumen.  相似文献   

13.
The oocytes of carnivorous mammals are distinguished by the presence of large amounts of a lipid, yolk like material. In the oocytes of the dog, lipid yolk formation marks one of the earliest indications of occyte maturation. In early primary oocytes, the yolk bodies are scattered within the ooplasm, while in later stages they are in discrete clusters. Lipid yolk material appears to be formed by at least two mechanisms. Throughout most of oogenesis the oocyte contains scattered dense granular bodies that become vacuolated by droplets of lipid material and may be transformed, by this process, into lipid yolk bodies. These granular bodies are highly reactive for acid phosphatase and are positive for glycoprotein with the PA-CA-methenamine technique. In addition, other glycoprotiein-rich yolk bodies appear to arise from many of the small dictyosomes. In secondary follicles these two mechanisms often appear to act conjointly with the dense vacuolated granules coalesing with the larger yolk bodies. Small yolk bodies are intensely reactive for glycoprotein, becoming less reactive as they enlarge and mature. The developing yolk bodies are often associated with the acid phosphatase-positive granules. The peripheral portions of the larger yolk bodies are faintly reactive for both acid phosphatase and glycoprotein. All reactivity is lost in mature yolk bodies. Thin layer chromatography of the total lipids extracted from isolated oocytes reveals a pattern that is consistent among dogs of the same and of different breeds. The most abundant lipid fraction from each dog oocyte extraction stains strongly for glycolipid.  相似文献   

14.
Vitellogenesis of developing oocytes of a Dipteran insect Chironomus thummi has been investigated. The onset of yolk deposition is marked by the differentiation of the oolemma including the formation of microvilli and endocytosis. These changes are accompanied by the appearance of small electron dense granules, similar in density to the yolk platelets, arising through the sequential accumulation of material into the matrices of the multivesicular bodies (MVBs). These latter structures are produced in the previtellogenic oocytes of the pharate pupae and early pharate adults. Often the limiting membrane of the MVBs bears bristle coats resembling those of the coated vesicles of pinocytotic origin, suggesting that it is through the fusion with the pinocytotic vesicles that the accumulation of dense material in the MVBs results. That the Mvbs transform into structures resembling yolk granules is supported by statistical analysis which indicates that the decrease in the number of electron-dense MVBs coincides with the increase in the occurrence of small dense yolk granules. In the late pharate adult stage the yolk granules are considerably larger than those of earlier stages. It is during this period that at least one type of electron-dense granule occurs at the oocyte follicle cell border, and that these apparently contribute to the formation of the vitelline envelope. The results of the present study indicate that preformed oocytic elements, the MVBs, play a strategic role in the formation and arrangement of the yolk granules in Chironomus. Since these structures account for the bulk of the ooplasm, it appears that the MVBs are at least partly responsible for the correct ordering of the cytoplasmic constituents of the oocytes, which is critical for the proper development and differentiation of the embryo.  相似文献   

15.
Electron microscope studies on Necturus maculosus oocytes ranging in size from 1.1–1.5 mm in diameter indicate the primary proteinaceous yolk to arise within structures referred to in other amphibian oocytes as yolk precursor sacs or bodies. The origin of these yolk precursor sacs appears to result from the activity of the Golgi complexes which form multivesicular and granular-vesicular bodies, the limiting membrane of which is at times incomplete. During differentiation, the yolk precursor sacs contain small vesicles similar in size to Golgi vesicles, larger vesicles similar to vesicular elements of the agranular endoplasmic reticulum and, on occasion, a portion of a mitochondrion. The interior of these sacs becomes granular, perhaps by a dissolution of the components just described, and soon becomes organized into a crystalline configuration. In oocytes 2.0–2.5 mm in diameter, an extensive micropinocytotic activity begins, continues throughout vitellogenesis, and constitutes the primary mechanism for the formation of secondary yolk protein. Numerous coated and smooth-surfaced vesicles, as well as electron-dense and electronlucent ones, fuse in the cortical ooplasm to form progressively larger yolk platelets.  相似文献   

16.
The formation of protein-carbohydrate yolk in the statoblast of a fresh-water bryozoan, Pectinatella gelatinosa, was studied by electron microscopy. Two types (I and II) of yolk cells were distinguished. The type I yolk cells are mononucleate and comprise a large majority of the yolk cells. The type II yolk cells are small in number; they become multinucleate by fusion of cells at an early stage of vitellogenesis. In both types of yolk cells, electron-dense granules (dense bodies) are formed in Golgi or condensing vacuoles, which are then called yolk granules. For the formation of yolk granules, the following processes are considered: 1. Yolk protein is synthesized in the rough-surfaced endoplasmic reticulum (RER) of the yolk cells. 2. The synthesized protein condenses in the cisternal space of the RER and is packaged into small oval swellings, which are then released from the RER as small vesicles (Golgi vesicles, 300-600 A in diameter). 3. The small vesicles fuse with one another to form condensing vacuoles, or with pre-existing growing yolk granules. 4. In the matrix of the condensing vacuoles or growing yolk granules, electron-dense fibers are fabricated and then arranged in a paracrystalline pattern to form the dense body. 5. After the dense body reaches its full size, excess membrane is removed and eventually the yolk granules come to mature. Toward the end of vitellogenesis of the yolk cells, the cytoplasmic organelles are ingested by autophagosomes derived from multivesicular bodies and disappear.  相似文献   

17.
The investigation was carried out on two Cephalopods: Sepia officinalis and Loligo vulgaris. During previtellogenesis, the follicle cells (F.C.), originally arranged at the periphery of the oocyte, form strands, through the axis of which runs a blood vessel. The follicle strands then make their way down into the ooplasm. They end up by occuping the greater part of the volume of the oocyte. At this stage, despite their increase in size, the F.C. do not undergo conspicuous cytological transformations. In the ooplasm, excepting a few specialized structures (annulate lamellae), the organites display no notable differentiation. The onset of vitellogenesis is characterized by the appearance in the ooplasm of elements paracrystalline in structure. A zona pellucida appears between the oocyte and the F.C., and it is at the point that yolk of a permanent type begins to accumulate. Concurrently the F.C. undergo characteristic reorganization: hypertrophy of the nucleolar mass, multiplication of granular reticulum cisternae, increase both in the number and the size of the Golgi complexes. The saccules of the Golgi complex process a material rich in carbohydrate protein bearing the same cytochemical characteristics as the yolk. In the basal zone of the F.C., deep invaginations of the wall of blood vessels scallop the cytoplasm. F.C. look like "podocyte cells". Immunofluorescence study suggest there is no immunological identity between blood and yolk proteins. The formation of chorion is accompanied by a fresh transformation of the F.C.: the granular endoplasmic reticulum breaks up into rounded cisternae containing a dense material. Concurrently the morphology of the Golgi complex is modified. The earliest chorion elements accumulate, firstly in the forme of isolated lobules within the zona pellucida. They then fuse to make a continous layer bounding the microvilli of the F.C. These cells eventually enter into a phase of degeneration and disappear, whilst the oocyte is set free by dehiscence into coelomic cavity.  相似文献   

18.
Vitellogenic oocytes of all pycnogonids studied so far contain dilated elements of the endoplasmic reticulum, filled with characteristic electron-dense bodies. During vitellogenesis these bodies fuse and form larger, almost spherical granules that were traditionally interpreted as nascent yolk granules. Here, we present the results of ultrastructural investigations of previtellogenic and early vitellogenic oocytes of Propallene longiceps (Pycnogonida, Callipallenidae). We show that the intra-cisternal bodies/granules of pycnogonids are not involved in vitellogenesis but contain macromolecules that are released from the oocyte and contribute to the formation of an egg envelope. The obtained results are discussed in a phylogenetic context. We suggest that the presence of the intra-cisternal electron-dense bodies in the oocyte cytoplasm represents a plesiomorphic character of arthropods inherited from the arthropod ancestor.  相似文献   

19.
Summary

Primary lysosomes appear in the oocytes of A. gibbosa at the end of previtellogenesis. The lysosomes fuse with the cisternae of the endoplasmic reticulum and give rise to yolk globules containing acid phosphatase. The yolk globules then grow by fusion.  相似文献   

20.
The structure of the developing oocytes in the ovary of unfed and fed femaleArgas (Persicargas) arboreus is described as seen by scanning (SEM) and transmission (TEM) electron microscopy. The unfed female ovary contains small oocytes protruding onto the surface and its epithelium consists of interstitial cells, oogonia and young oocytes. Feeding initiates oocyte growth through the previtellogenic and vitellogenic phases of development. These phases can be observed by SEM in the same ovary.The surface of isolated, growing oocytes is covered by microvilli which closely contact the basal lamina investing the ovarian epithelium and contains a shallow, circular area with cytoplasmic projections and a deep pit, or micropyle, at the epithelium side. In more advanced oocytes the shell is deposited between microvilli and later completely covers the surface.Transmission EM of growing oocytes in the previtellogenic phase reveals nuclear and nucleolar activity in the emission of dense granules passing into the cytoplasm and the formation of surface microvilli. The cell cytoplasm is rich in free ribosomes and polysomes and contains several dictyosomes associated with dense vesicles and mitochondria which undergo morphogenic changes as growth proceeds. Membrane-limited multivesiculate bodies, probably originating from modified mitochondria, dictyosomes and ribosomal aggregates, are also observed. Rough endoplasmic reticulum is in the form of annulate lamellae. During vitellogenesis, proteinaceous yolk bodies are formed by both endogenous and exogenous sources. The former is involved in the formation of multivesicular bodies which become primary yolk bodies, whereas the latter process involves internalization from the haemolymph through micropinocytosis in pits, vesicles and reservoirs. These fuse with the primary yolk bodies forming large yolk spheres. Glycogen and lipid inclusions are found in the cytoplasm between the yolk spheres.  相似文献   

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