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1.
The spermatozoon and some spermatid stages of Siboglinum (Pogonophora) have been examined by light and electron microscopy. In the spermatozoon a helical acrosome, a helical nucleus and a “body” with axonema follow each other in normal sequence. Head and tail are joined by a very short neck region containing two modified centrioles. The posterior portion of the nucleus is surrounded by a mitochondrial sheath consisting of three tightly wound mitochondrial helices. In the main portion of the tail the 9+2 unit is sorrounded by a granular sheath of dense material. In the neck region a centriole adjunct develops into a dense substance containing about nine rods. At an early stage, when the centriolar apparatus and flagellum become associated with the nucleus, three large mitochondria with fairly regular cristae are seen at the base of the nucleus. A well developed Golgi apparatus is present in early stages. Rows of microtubules are observed encircling the spermatid nucleus. Compared with the primitive type of spermatozoon the pogonophore sperm shows elongated and specialized nucleus, acrosome and mitochondria. It is concluded that the ancestral form must have had a fairly primitive spermatozoon and that evolution has proceeded towards a modified sperm with complicated spiral structure in connection with the evolution of a modified biology of fertilization, viz. specialized spermatophores. It is not known how the spermatophore discharges the spermatozoa nor how the spermatozoa find their way to the eggs. Two kinds of sperms are produced in the gonads of Siboglinum. The atypical sperm is smaller than the typical one.  相似文献   

2.
The ultrastructure of the mature spermatozoa and spermatogenesis of the bivalve Scrobicularia plana are described. Support cells extend from the basal lamina to the lumen of the testis and are laterally connected to the germinal epithelium. Germ cells present intercellular bridges and flagella since the spermatogonial stage. While spermatogonia and spermatocytes appear connected to support cells by desmosome-like junctions, elongated spermatids are held at the acrosomal region by support cell finger-like processes. During spermiogenesis, the acrosomal vesicle differentiates from a golgian saccule and then migrates to the nuclear apex. A microtubular manchette arising from centrioles surrounds the acrosomal vesicle, the nucleus, and the mitochondria at the time these three organelles start their elongation, disappearing after that. The mature spermatozoon of S. plana lacks a distinct midpiece because the mitochondria extend from the region of the pericentriolar complex along the nucleus anteriorly for approximately 1.4 μm. The features of this bivalve type of modified spermatozoon are compared with those of other animal groups having similar modifications.  相似文献   

3.
B. Hosfeld 《Zoomorphology》1994,114(4):195-202
Summary The spermatophore, mature spermatozoon and spermiogenesis of Heterolaophonte minuta have been investigated by light and electron microscopy. The spermatophore contains three different secretions which are responsible for the discharge of the contents of the spermatophore, the formation of the fertilization tube and the storage of the spermatozoa. The spermatozoon represents a type new for the Copepoda. It is a filiform cell about 25 m in length, ellipsoid in transverse section and tapered at the posterior end. The elongated nucleus contains chromatin fibrils and does not possess a nuclear envelope. Posterior to the nucleus, six mitochondria are placed one after the other. The posterior part of the spermatozoon contains parallel pseudomembranes. The gamete is not helically twisted and is without a flagellum and centrioles. The most remarkable feature of the spermatozoon is an osmiophilic cap in front of the nucleus. This cap corresponds to the acrosome of the spermatozoon. Early stages of spermiogenesis take place in the testis, where the spermatids are incorporated into accessory cells. The origin of the chromatin fibrils and the glycocalyx, as well as the breakdown of the nuclear envelope and centrioles, represent the final steps of spermiogenesis which occur in the vas deferens.  相似文献   

4.
Some stages of spermiogenesis of the marine heterotardigrade Echiniscoides sigismundi were investigated employing conventional electron microscopy. Spermatids are connected to each other by cytoplasmic bridges. A large vesicle originating from dictyosomes is formed in early spermatids; it becomes condensed in later stages (‘dense body’). Early spermatids contain two mitochondria closely attached and largely unmodified. In an advanced stage of development a (pseudo?) acrosome is formed close to the nucleus. Formation takes place at the face of the nucleus opposite the dictyosomes that had contributed to the dense body. Numerous microtubules lie near the centriole and throughout the cytoplasm. In late spermatids mitochondria located in a membrane-bounded sac lying more or less parallel to the flagellum. These ‘free mitochondria’ as well as the elongated nucleus with the (pseudo?) acrosome give the spermatozoon two additional ‘tails’. Data on spermiogenesis and spermatozoon ultrastructure mainly in marine Heterotardigrada are still very limited and often too anecdotal to allow reasonable conclusions to be drawn. However, structural features shared by Eu- and Heterotardigrada are emphasised.  相似文献   

5.
Spermatogenesis and the structure of mature spermatozoa were studied using TEM in a free-living marine chromadorid nematode Neochromadora poecilosoma from the Sea of Japan. In spermatocytes, fibrous bodies (FB) develop; in spermatids, the synthetic apparatus lies in the residual body, while the nucleus, mitochondria, and FB are located in the main cell body (MCB). The nucleus consists of a diffuse chromatin of fibrous structure, which is not enclosed in a nuclear envelope. In the spermatid stage, the development of FB is completed, and immature spermatozoa from the proximal region of the testis do not show any structural differences from the MCB of spermatids. The mature spermatozoa are polarized cells. They attach to the uterus wall by a pseudopod filled with filaments of the cytoskeleton; in the MCB of spermatozoon, there is a nucleus surrounded by mitochondria and osmiophilic bodies. The spermatozoa of N. poecilosoma show typical ultrastructure features of sperm cells found in most studied nematodes (amoeboid nature and the absence of axoneme, acrosome, and nuclear envelope). However, no aberrant organelles characteristic of nematode spermatozoa were found throughout sperm development in N. poecilosoma and other chromadorids.  相似文献   

6.
Miquel, J., Torres, J., Foronda, P. and Feliu, C. 2010. Spermiogenesis and spermatozoon ultrastructure of the davaineid cestode Raillietina micracantha. — Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 91 : 212–221 The spermiogenesis and the ultrastructural organization of the spermatozoon of the davaineid cestode Raillietina micracantha are described by means of transmission electron microscopy. Spermiogenesis begins with the formation of a zone of differentiation containing two centrioles. One of the centrioles develops a free flagellum that later fuses with a cytoplasmic extension. The nucleus migrates along the spermatid body after the proximodistal fusion of the flagellum and the cytoplasmic extension. During advanced stages of spermiogenesis a periaxonemal sheath and intracytoplasmic walls appear in the spermatids. Spermiogenesis finishes with the appearance of two helicoidal crested bodies at the base of spermatids and, finally, the narrowing of the ring of arched membranes detaches the fully formed spermatozoon. The mature spermatozoon of R. micracantha is a long and filiform cell, tapered at both ends, which lacks mitochondria. It exhibits two crested bodies of different lengths, one axoneme of the 9 + ‘1’ pattern of trepaxonematan Platyhelminthes, twisted cortical microtubules, a periaxonemal sheath, intracytoplasmic walls, granules of glycogen and a spiralled nucleus. The anterior extremity of the spermatozoon is characterized by the presence of an electron‐dense apical cone and two spiralled crested bodies while the posterior extremity of the male gamete exhibits only the axoneme and an electron‐dense posterior tip.  相似文献   

7.
The spermatozoon of B. plicatilisis a thread–like cell with an anterior flagellar portion and a posterior cell body. The flagellum has a lateral ‘undulating membrane’, containing a folded longitudinal cisterna and an axoneme. The basal body of the axoneme is at the anterior tip. The axoneme lacks outer dynein arms and extends through the entire flagellar region and most of the cell body. The main portion of the flagellum and of the cell body contains a series of vesicles with tightly packed tubules that may serve as a cytoskeleton. The cell body contains a partly condensed nucleus, several mitochondria and some cytoplasm. Some elongated mitochondria are arranged in the postnuclear region. When the spermatozoon moves, the undulations propagate from the basal body at the flagellar tip. Late spermatids can be recognized by the nucleus and the flagellum being coiled and enclosed within a common cell membrane. As in other rotifers, there are cigar–like cell products (‘rods’) in the testes. The general organization of the cell, including the absence of an evident acrosome, resembles that of the other known monogonont sperm types.  相似文献   

8.
The spermatozoon of the monopisthocotylean monogenean Pseudodactylogyrus sp. (a gill parasite of eels) has a single axoneme showing a 9+‘1’ pattern, a nucleus and a mitochondrion, but has no cortical microtubules. This species thus provides a very simple model for the study of tubulin in the 9+‘1’ axonemes of the Platyhelminthes, in contrast with digenean sperm which have a more complex spermatozoon with two such axonemes and cortical microtubules. Indirect immunofluorescence labelling of tubulin shows that the elongating spermatids, initially lying in all directions in the early stages, are arranged as parallel elements in further stages. The number of spermatids in an isogenic group could also be precisely counted and equals 32. Nuclear labelling with fluorescent dyes shows that the nuclei, first located in the common mass of the spermatids, later elongate and migrate into the growing spermatids, and that the nucleus is located in the central part of the mature spermatozoon, with the two extremities devoid of nucleus. Labelling with antibodies directed against acetylated, tyrosinated, and polyglutamylated tubulin gave positive results, thus indicating that these post-translational modifications of tubulin are present in the axoneme of spermatids and spermatozoa of monopisthocotylean monogeneans.  相似文献   

9.
The spermiogenesis consisting of five spermatid stages and the early spermatozoon has been investigated in Armorloricus elegans (Loricifera) with the use of transmission electron microscopy. The male reproductive system consists of three parts; testes, vasa deferentia and seminal vesicles. Caudally, the two seminal vesicles merge together in a ciliated duct and the excretory/gonadal—and digestive systems continue through the recto-urogenital canal, which opens via the lateral gonopores and the temporarily closed anal system. Spermiogenesis mainly occurs in the testes, whereas further maturation of the late spermatids and early spermatozoa occurs in the vasa deferentia and seminal vesicles. A maturation gradient (from spermatocytes to spermatozoa) is found from the posterior peripheral part of the testes to the anterior periphery and then centrally. During spermiogenesis the round nucleus becomes more osmiophilic and condensation of chromatin occurs. Later the nucleus elongates until it becomes rod-shaped in the early spermatozoa. In the second spermatid stage, a large vesicle is formed by saccules developed from the Golgi complex. This vesicle develops further and consists of three different osmiophilic parts with some crystal-like structures inside and is on the outside almost entirely surrounded by thick striated filaments. In the mid-piece the flagellum has a typical 9 × 2 + 2 axoneme and the two mitochondria are fused into a single sheet surrounding the flagellum. In the early spermatozoon stage an acrosomal-like cap structure with an acrosome filament appears proximal to the protruded rod-shaped nucleus. This cap is not formed by the Golgi complex and therefore might not be a true acrosome. Comparing the early spermatozoa of A. elegans with other cycloneuralians has shown some similarities with especially Kinorhyncha and Priapulida. These similarities are thought to be plesiomorphic.  相似文献   

10.
The mature spermatozoon of Admetus pomilio is a spherical cell containing nucleus and tightly coiled flagellum. In early spermatids the Golgi apparatus forms the acrosomal vesicle and at the opposite side the distal centriole gives rise to the axonemal complex of the sperm tail. As the nucleus elongates, chromatin forms twisted filaments and the spermatid nucleus takes on a helical form. Microtubules are juxtaposed with the nucleus envelope, which is separated from a central chromatin mass by an electron lucid region. A long perforatorium, located on the border of the chromatin mass, runs helically in the nucleus from the centriolar region to subacrosomal space. During tail elongation, the anterior part of the axoneme is surrounded by a long, spiral mitochondrial sheath. In the late spermatid, chromatin filaments appear twisted and become aggregated. The nucleus and flagellum undergo further contortions in which the nucleus coils and the flagellum winds up into the body of the cell and coils in a regular fashion. The mitochondrial sheath surrounds about 2/3 of the 9 + 3 axoneme. These features of spermatid ultrastructure resemble those in the primitive Liphistiomorpha.  相似文献   

11.
This is the first study investigating spermatogenesis and spermatozoan ultrastructure in the polyclad flatworm Prosthiostomum siphunculus. The testes are numerous and scattered as follicles ventrally between the digestive ramifications. Each follicle contains the different stages of sperm differentiation. Spermatocytes and spermatids derive from a spermatogonium and the spermatids remain connected by intercellular bridges. Chromatoid bodies are present in the cytoplasm of spermatogonia up to spermatids. During early spermiogenesis, a differentiation zone appears in the distal part of spermatids. A ring of microtubules extends along the entire sperm shaft just beneath the cell membrane. An intercentriolar body is present and gives rise to two axonemes, each with a 9 + “1” micro‐tubular pattern. Development of the spermatid leads to cell elongation and formation of a filiform, mature spermatozoon with two free flagella and with cortical microtubules along the sperm shaft. The flagella exit the sperm shaft at different levels, a finding common for acotyleans, but so far unique for cotylean polyclads. The Golgi complex produces numerous electron‐dense bodies of two types and of different sizes. These bodies are located around a perinuclear row of mitochondria. The elongated nucleus extends almost along the entire sperm body. The nucleus is wide in the proximal part and becomes narrow going towards the distal end. Thread‐like chromatin mixed with electron‐dense intranuclear spindle‐shaped bodies are present throughout nucleus. The general sperm ultrastructure, the presence of intranuclear bodies and a second type of cytoplasmic electron‐dense bodies may provide characters useful for phylogenetic analysis.  相似文献   

12.
Summary Early spermatids of the crabUca tangeri consists of the nucleus of granular chromatin and the cytoplasm, which contains a proacrosomal vesicle in close association with membrane lamellae. In the mid spermatids an invagination of the acrosomal vesicle membrane gives rise to the formation of the perforatorium, a spindle-shaped tubule which encloses tubular membranous structures. The pair of centrioles located at the base of the acrosome is not directly involved in perforatorial differentiation. The acrosomal vesicle shows a heterogeneous content composed of the operculum, the thickened ring, and three layers of different materials concentrically arranged around the perforatorium. During the late spermatid stage the nuclear profile differentiates numerous slender arms and the chromatin arranges into fibers. Membranous tubules from the cytoplasm become incorporated into the tubular structures of the perforatorium. The mature spermatozoon has the typical structure of the branchyuran sperm, with a complex acrosome, cupped by the nucleus, and a thin cytoplasmic band intervening between the former main elements. The centrioles are degenerate. The nuclear arms are unusually numerous (more than 20) and lack microtubules or microtubular derivatives.  相似文献   

13.
This study presents the ultrastructure of the mature spermatozoon of Opechona bacillaris, a digenean belonging to the family Lepocreadiidae. The sperm cell of O. bacillaris exhibits the general pattern described in most of the Lepocreadioidea: two axonemes of the 9 + ‘1’ pattern of the Trepaxonemata, mitochondria, a cortical mitochondrion, a nucleus, electron‐dense material in the anterior extremity of the spermatozoon, external ornamentation of the plasma membrane with associated spinelike bodies, and granules of glycogen. However, particularities of O. bacillaris are the simultaneous presence in the anterior extremity of the spermatozoon of the electron‐dense material, a mitochondrion, and the absence of cortical microtubules. In the Lepocreadiidae, we describe for the first time in O. bacillaris spinelike bodies associated with the external ornamentation of the plasma membrane and two mitochondria. The first mitochondrion is moniliform and composed of a mitochondrial cord with joined mitochondrial bulges. The second mitochondrion shows a regular form. The posterior tip of the spermatozoon has only singlets to owing to the disorganization of the second axoneme and granules of glycogen as occurs in Hypocreadium caputvadum, the other studied species of the family Lepocreadiidae.  相似文献   

14.
Early spermatids of the onychophoran Peripatopsis capensis are spherical cells with a centrally located nucleus, numerous mitochondria, Golgi complexes, microtubules and two centrioles. During spermiogenesis, Golgi vesicles migrate to one side of the cell where they form a tight aggregate, which is later shed. The mature spermatozoon has no acrosome. Several mitochondria fuse to form a middle piece containing three large mitochondria. Nucleus and middle-piece elongate, presumably under the influence of helically twisted microtubules. Outside this set of microtubules a continuous layer of endoplasmic reticulum cisternae is formed which separates the interior portion of the cell from an external cytoplasmic rim, which is later shed. Outside the 9 + 2 complex, the tail presents nine accessory microtubules, and a peripheral layer of microtubules beneath the plasma membrane. The enforcement of the tail structure may be related to the fertilization biology of this animal, which is by “hypodermal” impregnation.  相似文献   

15.
Spermatozoa of the echiurans Bonellia viridis and Hamingia arctica show a similar ultrastructure. They are of a modified type. The head consists of a roughly cylindrical nucleus, which has a cover of electron-dense material. The acrosome is very large and consists of an acrosomal vesicle and a rod-shaped perforatorium or acrosomal rod. In close association with the nucleus, one or two mitochondria are found forming an irregular ring around the posterior tip of the nucleus and the centriolar apparatus. There are two centrioles, the proximal one with the conventional triplet microtubular structure. The tail flagellum is about 50 μm long and has the 9+2 axonemal structure. The oblique attachment of the acrosome to the anterior part of the nucleus gives the spermatozoon a bilateral symmetry. However, in the nuclear morphology, the arrangement of electron-dense material around the nucleus, in the mitochondria, and in the attachment of the tail flagellum, the spermatozoon shows asymmetric organization. The sperm structure in bonelliids is unique but its genesis and the morphology of the mitochondrial midpiece support the theory that the echiurans are related to the annelids. The main results of the study are summarized in Fig. 11.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Groups of spermatids of Limulus polyphemus undergo differentiation in thin-walled cysts within the seminiferous tubules. The nucleus compacts to a spherical shape, but retains a much less condensed nuclear appendage, whose unique pores are each surrounded by a microtubule. The appendage, unmodified mitochondria, glycogen, and coated vesicles, all present in the mature spermatozoon, suggest an unusual degree of metabolic self-sufficiency of the cell. The acrosome is associated with a 50 μ-long acrosomal filament that penetrates the nucleus during spermiogenesis and coils up in the cytoplasm, enveloped by two outer nuclear membranes. The filament, which eventually comes to lie in the circumnuclear cisterna, retains a covering of one membrane during its discharge at the time of the acrosome reaction. The posterior region of the head forms a thin-walled collar with peculiar internal supports around the base of the flagellum. Serverance of intercellular bridges between spermatids, cytoplasm elimination, and rupture of the cyst precede liberation of the immature spermatozoa into the lumen of the seminiferous tubules. Notwithstanding its peculiarities, the Limulus spermatozoon, with its simple shape closely resembling that of annelids and molluscs, represents the most primitive arthropod spermatozoon congruent with the evolutionary stability of the xiphosurans.  相似文献   

18.
The process of sperm development in Phoronopsis harmeri was studied by electron microscopy. Developing spermatogenical cells are aggregated around the capillaries of the haemal plexus. The spermatogonia, which are situated around the capillary walls of the caeca, are remarkable for the presence of germ-line vesicles and contain their centrioles near the cell membrane. The spermatocytes and spermatids are flagellated cells arranged in clusters. During spermiogenesis the basal body/flagellum complex migrates to the apical pole of the spermatid. The acrosome-like structure arises from material produced by the Golgi complex. It lacks a surrounding membrane and has a fibrillar content. The nucleus elongates and the condensation of chromatin is caused by an activation of 'initiation centres'. The late spermatid and the spermatozoon appear as two-armed 'V'-shaped cells in which one arm contains the nucleus and posteriorly located mitochondria, and the other one is the axoneme. Spermatogenesis of P. harmeri is an interesting example of gamete differentiation where advanced sperm structure is combined with a plesiomorphic pattern of sperm development characterized as 'flagellate spermatogenesis'. Communicated by H.-D. Franke  相似文献   

19.
The spermatozoon of Tornatina sp. has been studied with phase-contrast light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The head of the spermatozoon consists of an elongate acrosome which caps the apex of an unusually complex, helical nucleus. This elaborate nuclear morphology has not been previously reported, but possibly is found in other opisthobranch gastropod spermatozoa. An axoneme is inserted deeply into the base of the nucleus whilst posterior from the nucleus, the axoneme is ensheathed successively by the mitochondrial derivative (midpiece) and 'glycogen' granules (glycogen piece). The midpiece exhibits fine structure similar to that observed in other euthyneuran spermatozoa (paracrystalline and matrix materials) and possesses a single helical compartment filled with what are probably glycogen granules. A dense ring structure occurs at the junction of the midpiece and glycogen piece. The spermatozoon of Tornatina and other gastropods (prosobranch and euthyneuran) are compared.  相似文献   

20.
The aim of this study was to analyse spermatogenesis in the African butterflyfish, Pantodon buchholzi, using transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. P. buchholzi is the most basal teleost that exhibits insemination and produces a highly complex introsperm with the most elongate midpiece known in teleost fishes. Their early stages (spermatogonia and spermatocytes) do not differ greatly from those of other fishes, with the exception of Golgi apparatus degradation appearing as spindle-shaped bodies (SSBs). In round, early spermatids, the development of the flagellum begins after the migration of the centriolar complex towards the nucleus. Later, the elongation of the midpiece coincides with the displacement of the mitochondria and their fusion to produce nine mitochondrial derivatives (MDs). In these spermatids, the nucleus is situated laterally to the midpiece, with condensing chromatin in the centre of the nucleus. Within the midpiece, the flagellum is located within a cytoplasmic canal and is surrounded by a cytoplasmic sleeve containing fibres, MDs and a great amount of cytoplasm located on one side. During the next phase, nuclear rotation, the highly condensed chromatin is displaced to a position above the centriolar apparatus, whereas chromatin-free nucleoplasm is transferred to the cytoplasm. Later, this nucleoplasm, still surrounded by the nuclear membrane, is eliminated into the cyst lumen as the nucleoplasmic packet. Within the highly elongate spermatids, other excess organelles (SSBs, endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria) are eliminated as residual bodies (RBs). Fully developed spermatozoa, which contain conical-shaped nuclei, eventually coalesce to form unencapsulated sperm packets (spermatozeugmata) that are surrounded by RBs at the level of the extremely elongate midpieces. Later, RBs are removed at the periphery of the cyst by means of phagocytosis by Sertoli cells.  相似文献   

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