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1.
2.
During Drosophila melanogaster oogenesis, a germline stem cell divides forming a cyst of 16 interconnected cells. One cell enters the oogenic pathway, and the remaining 15 differentiate as nurse cells. Although directed transport and localization of oocyte differentiation factors within the single cell are indispensible for selection, maintenance, and differentiation of the oocyte, the mechanisms regulating these events are poorly understood. Mago Nashi and Tsunagi/Y14, core components of the exon junction complex (a multiprotein complex assembled on spliced RNAs), are essential for restricting oocyte fate to a single cell and for localization of oskar mRNA. Here we provide evidence that Mago Nashi and Tsunagi/Y14 form an oogenic complex with Ranshi, a protein with a zinc finger-associated domain and zinc finger domains. Genetic analyses of ranshi reveal that (1) 16-cell cysts are formed, (2) two cells retain synaptonemal complexes, (3) all cells have endoreplicated DNA (as observed in nurse cells), and (4) oocyte-specific cytoplasmic markers accumulate and persist within a single cell but are not localized within the posterior pole of the presumptive oocyte. Our results indicate that Ranshi interacts with the exon junction complex to localize components essential for oocyte differentiation within the posterior pole of the presumptive oocyte.  相似文献   

3.
The division and differentiation of Drosophila cystocytes   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
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4.
Germline cysts containing 16 interconnected cells (cystocytes) are produced at an early stage of Drosophila oogenesis by progenitor cells known as cystoblasts that undergo four synchronous rounds of incomplete division. During cyst formation, a region of specialized, spectrin-rich cytoplasm called the fusome traverses the intercellular Connections (ring canals), linking individual cystocytes. Subsequently, 15 cystocytes begin to transport specific RNAs and other components into the remaining cell, the future oocyte. We used fusome-specific antibodies to characterize the early stages of cyst formation. During the first cystoblast division, a spherical mass of fusome material (the “spectrosome”) was associated with only one pole of the mitotic spindle, revealing that this division is asymmetric. During the subsequent three divisions, the growing fusome always associated with the pole of each mitotic spindle that remained in the mother cell, and only extended through the newly formed ring canals after each division was completed. These observations suggest that fusomes help establish a system of directional transport between cystocytes that underlies oocyte determination. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
The egg chamber of Drosophila melanogaster consists of 16 interconnected cells surrounded by a monolayer of follicle cells. Each 16 cell cluster (from which the oocyte and 15 nurse cells differentiate) arises within the germarial region of an ovariole. To study the ultrastructure of the early stages in the formation and differentiation of egg chambers, a three dimensional reconstruction was made from serial thin sections through a germarium from a 24-hour old, virgin female. The germarium was found to be subdivided into three regions: (1) The mitotically active area where clusters of 16 cells originate from a series of cystocyte divisions, (2) the region where these cells interact with mesodermal cells, and (3) the region where the germarial cyst is transformed into the first egg chamber in the vitellarium. Since cystocytes were found to decrease in size with each division, the possibility exists that cell size may determine when the divisions cease. Models are presented which mimic with varying degrees of success the developmental changes the germarial cells undergo with time. Hypothesis are developed to explain why stem line oogonia are restricted to the anterior portion of the germarium, why mesodermal cells first interact with cystocytes in region 2, and why the oocyte is oriented posteriorly. The nuclear differentiations of the component cells of the chamber are described and correlated with observed differences in radiosensitivity. Symbionts were observed in the germaria of several strains of Drosophila, and the bearing of these findings upon nutritional studies is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Summary An ultrastructural study was made of the ring canal system which connects the sister ovarian cystocytes that arise in the germaria of wild type Drosophila melanogaster females. It was discovered that during an oogonial mitosis both chromosomes and spindle are enclosed by a multilayered, perforated membrane system derived (at least in part) from the nuclear envelope. The cytokinesis of stem line oogonia takes place through the formation of a cleavage furrow. A second method of formation of plasma membrane is found in the case of cystocytes. It involves the production along the plane of division of a plaque of interconnected vesicles and tubules and later the coalescence of nearby tubules to form continuous sheets of membrane which segregate the cytoplasms of the sister cells. However, these remain connected by a canal which is enclosed by a ring-shaped rim that is completed prior to the plasma membrane to which the rim is subsequently attached. It is postulated that the rim represents a transformed midbody. As development proceeds the canal becomes wider, its rim becomes thicker, and the inner circumference of the rim becomes coated with a thick deposit having different cytochemical properties than the rim itself. Cystocyte divisions produce sister cells which differ in that one receives all previously formed canals; the other none. In the case of the last division (and perhaps in earlier ones as well) the sister cell receiving all previously formed canals also receives more cytoplasm than its sister. As the cells of the cluster grow, the canals remain close together. This finding suggests that when new plasma membrane is synthesized, it is added in areas remote from the canals. An investigation of the positioning in three dimensions of the fifteen canals of a newly formed, 16 cellcluster suggests that the spindles produced at one division are never parallel to those formed at the subsequent division. This continual shifting of the axes of the spindles at consecutive divisions presumably results in the branching chains of cells which characterize a cystocyte cluster. The possession of a unique pattern of cortical structures by two cystocytes is accompanied by the nuclear synthesis of synaptonemal complexes. The other fourteen cystocytes differentiate into nurse cells. In the most posterior portion of the germarium one of the two potential oocytes switches to the nurse cell developmental pathway. This switched off oocyte and the definitive oocyte grow at rates which differ greatly and are correlated to the amount of contact between their surfaces and certain follicle cells. As development proceeds centrioles accumulate in the oocyte, and most of these are thought to have been carried from the nurse cells into the oocyte in the nutrient stream.The authors are grateful to Richard Z. Belch and James E. Bradof for their conscientious assistance and to E. John Pfiffner for preparation of the inked drawings and construction of the Polyform models. This research was supported by the National Science Foundation grant GB7457.  相似文献   

7.
Drosophila ovarian cysts arise through a series of four synchronous incomplete mitotic divisions. After each round of mitosis, a membranous organelle, the fusome, grows along the cleavage furrow and the remnants of the mitotic spindle to connect all cystocytes in a cyst. The fusome is essential for the pattern and synchrony of the mitotic cyst divisions as well as oocyte differentiation. Using live cell imaging, green fluorescent protein-tagged proteins, and photobleaching techniques, we demonstrate that fusomal endomembranes are part of a single continuous endoplasmic reticulum (ER) that is shared by all cystocytes in dividing ovarian cysts. Membrane and lumenal proteins of the common ER freely and rapidly diffuse between cystocytes. The fusomal ER mediates intercellular ER connectivity by linking the cytoplasmic ER membranes of all cystocytes within a cyst. Before entry into meiosis and onset of oocyte differentiation (between region 1 and region 2A), ER continuity between cystocytes is lost. Furthermore, analyses of hts and Dhc64c mutants indicate that intercellular ER continuity within dividing ovarian cysts requires the fusome cytoskeletal component and suggest a possible role for the common ER in synchronizing mitotic cyst divisions.  相似文献   

8.
《Zoology (Jena, Germany)》2014,117(3):200-206
It has been shown that in Drosophila the germline stem cells (GSCs), similar to the germline and non-germline stem cells of other species, develop and function in specialized microenvironments formed by somatic cells, referred to as the niches. In the fruit fly ovaries, the female GSCs divide asymmetrically to produce new GSCs and the progenitor cells, the cystoblasts (Cbs). Each Cb then divides to generate the cyst composed of 16 interconnected sibling cells, the cystocytes. After cyst formation, specific molecules are transferred to one of the cystocytes which differentiates into the oocyte, whereas the other 15 cystocytes become the nurse cells. We have studied morphology and ultrastructure of the germaria in the ovarioles (ovaries) of a basal “apterygotous” insect, the firebrat (Thermobia domestica). Our analyses have revealed that in this insect, putative GSCs are present along the anterior apex of the germarium. These cells are separated from each other and from the basement lamina covering the ovariole by characteristic somatic cells, termed the apical somatic cells (ASCs), or their elongated processes. We believe that all the ASCs of a given ovariole constitute a “dispersed” niche in which putative GSCs are anchored. Our analyses have additionally shown that in Thermobia, both the Cbs and young (meiotic) oocytes are always individual and never form syncytial cysts. These findings indicate that in certain basal insects the syncytial phase of oogenesis has been eliminated during evolution. Finally, we show that in the early meiotic oocytes of Thermobia, during the so-called bouquet stage, prominent Balbiani bodies (Bbs) are formed. Analysis of serial micrographs indicates that the Bbs invariably arise next to the segment of the nuclear envelope to which the telomeres of the bouquet chromosomes are attached. We suggest, in the light of these data, that the localization of the Bb together with the polar attachment of the bouquet chromosomes play a crucial role in the early asymmetrization of Thermobia oocytes.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

Erpobdella octoculata (Clitellata, Hirudinea, Erpobdellidae) has paired ovarian sacs, each containing several rod-shaped structures termed ovarian bodies. Oogenesis takes place within the ovarian bodies. We show that in the apical part of the bodies the germ-line cells form syncytial cysts of cells interconnected by stable intercellular bridges. Germ-line cyst architecture is broadly similar to that of other clitellate annelids; that is, each germ cell has only one intercellular bridge connecting it to the anuclear cytoplasmic mass, the cytophore. Unlike germ-line cysts described in other leech species, the cytophore in cysts of E. octoculata is poorly developed, taking the form of thin cytoplasmic strands. Oogenesis in E. octoculata is meroistic because the germ cells forming the cysts (cystocytes) have diverse fates, i.e., nurse cells and oocytes appear. One large ramified cell (apical cell) occurs within the apical part of the ovarian body. We compare the ultrastructure of the apical cell found in E. octoculata with that of apical cells described recently in some hirudiniform leeches. The germ-line cysts as well as the oocytes are enveloped by somatic follicular cells. As in other leeches, the follicular cells surrounding the growing oocytes have cytoplasm perforated by intracellular canals. In view of the many similarities between E. octoculata ovarian bodies and the ovary cords described in glossiphoniids and especially in hirudiniform leeches, we suggest that the ovarian bodies found in E. octoculata are in fact modified ovary cords.  相似文献   

10.
Background

Wolbachia are bacterial endosymbionts of many arthropod species in which they manipulate reproductive functions. The distribution of these bacteria in the Drosophila ovarian cells at different stages of oogenesis has been amply described. The pathways along which Wolbachia influences Drosophila oogenesis have been, so far, little studied. It is known that Wolbachia are abundant in the somatic stem cell niche of the Drosophila germarium. A checkpoint, where programmed cell death, or apoptosis, can occur, is located in region 2a/2b of the germarium, which comprises niche cells. Here we address the question whether or not the presence of Wolbachia in germarium cells can affect the frequency of cyst apoptosis in the checkpoint.

Results

Our current fluorescent microscopic observations showed that the wMel and wMelPop strains had different effects on female germline cells of D. melanogaster. The Wolbachia strain wMel did not affect the frequency of apoptosis in cells of the germarium. The presence of the Wolbachia strain wMelPop in the D. melanogasterw1118 ovaries increased the number of germaria where cells underwent apoptosis in the checkpoint. Based on the appearance in the electron microscope, there was no difference in morphological features of apoptotic cystocytes between Wolbachia-infected and uninfected flies. Bacteria with normal ultrastructure and large numbers of degenerating bacteria were found in the dying cyst cells.

Conclusions

Our current study demonstrated that the Wolbachia strain wMelPop affects the egg chamber formation in the D. melanogaster ovaries. This led to an increase in the number of germaria containing apoptotic cells. It is suggested that Wolbachia can adversely interfere either with the cystocyte differentiation into the oocyte or with the division of somatic stem cells giving rise to follicle cells and, as a consequence, to improper ratio of germline cells to follicle cells and, ultimately, to apoptosis of cysts. There was no similar adverse effect in D. melanogaster Canton S infected with the Wolbachia strain wMel. This was taken to mean that the observed increase in frequency of apoptosis was not the general effect of Wolbachia on germline cells of D. melanogaster, it was rather induced by the virulent Wolbachia strain wMelPop.

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11.
Summary Polar organisation in the follicles of adult Sarcophaga bullata is reflected in the nurse cell-oocyte axis and in the orientation of the two polar cell pairs in the follicular epithelium. The internal organisation of the nurse cell chamber contributes to polarity but not to dorsoventral asymmetry. Dorsoventral asymmetry is correlated with the eccentric position of the germinal vesicle and the orientation of the polar cell pairs; no other follicle cell specialisations are seen. In an ovary, follicles are preferentially orientated with the dorsal side to the centre of the ovary. Cytoskeletal and some haemolymph proteins are molecular markers of polarity. Thus, in pre-vitellogenic stages, tubulin immunoreactivity is higher in the oocyte than in the nurse cells, actin immunoreactivity is the same over the cystocytes and larval serum proteins are restricted to the poles. During vitellogenesis, both actin and tubulin become more concentrated in the nurse cells and larval serum protein 1 accumulated in the polar cells during border cell migration when yolk polypeptides also accumulate in the oocyte. At the end of vitellogenesis a lipophorin is taken up by the oocyte. No molecular marker of dorsoventral asymmetry was identified.  相似文献   

12.
In Hirudo medicinalis and Haemopis sanguisuga, two convoluted ovary cords are found within each ovary. Each ovary cord is a polarized structure composed of germ cells (oogonia, developing oocytes, nurse cells) and somatic cells (apical cell, follicular cells). One end of the ovary cord is club-shaped and comprises one huge apical cell, numerous oogonia, and small cysts (clusters) of interconnected germ cells. The main part of the cord contains fully developed cysts composed of numerous nurse cells connected via intercellular bridges with the cytophore, which in turn is connected by a cytoplasmic bridge with the growing oocyte. The opposite end of the cord degenerates. Cord integrity is ensured by flattened follicular cells enveloping the cord; moreover, inside the cord, some follicular cells (internal follicular cells) are distributed among germ cells. As oogenesis progresses, the growing oocytes gradually protrude into the ovary lumen; as a result, fully developed oocytes arrested in meiotic metaphase I float freely in the ovary lumen. This paper describes the successive stages of oogenesis of H. medicinalis in detail. Ovary organization in Hirudinea was classified within four different types: non-polarized ovary cords were found in glossiphoniids, egg follicles were described in piscicolids, ovarian bodies were found characteristic for erpobdellids, and polarized ovary cords in hirudiniforms. Ovaries with polarized structures equipped with apical cell (i.e. polarized ovary cords and ovarian bodies) (as found in arhynchobdellids) are considered as primary for Hirudinea while non-polarized ovary cords and the occurrence of egg follicles (rhynchobdellids) represent derived condition.  相似文献   

13.
Piscicola has a pair of elongated sac-shaped ovaries. Inside the ovaries are numerous small somatic cells and regularly spherical egg follicles. Each follicle is composed of three types of cells: many (average 30) germ cells (cystocytes) interconnected by intercellular bridges in clones (cysts), one intermediate cell, and three to five outer follicle cells (envelope cells). Each germ cell in a clone has one intercellular bridge connecting it to the central anucleate cytoplasmic mass, the cytophore. Each cluster of germ cells is completely embedded inside a single huge somatic follicle cell, the intermediate (interstitial) cell. The most spectacular feature of the intermediate cell is its development of a system of intracytoplasmic canals apparently formed of invaginations of its cell membrane. Initially the complex of germ cell cluster + intermediate cell is enclosed within an envelope composed of squamous cells. As oogenesis progresses the envelope cells gradually degenerate. All the germ cells that have terminated their mitotic divisions are of similar size and enter meiotic prophase, but one of the cystocytes promptly starts to grow faster and differentiates into the oocyte, whereas the remaining cystocytes withdraw from meiosis and become nurse cells (trophocytes). Numerous mitochondria, ER, and a vast amount of ribosomes are transferred from the trophocytes via the cytophore toward the oocyte. Eventually the oocyte ingests all the content of the cytophore, and the trophocytes degenerate. Little vitellogenesis takes place; the oocyte gathers nutrients in the form of small lipid droplets. At the end of oogenesis, an electron-dense fibrous vitelline envelope appears around the oocyte, among short microvilli. At the same time, electron-dense cortical granules occur in the oocyte cortical cytoplasm; at the end of oogenesis they are numerous, but after fertilization they disappear from the ooplasm. In the present article we point out many differences in the course of oogenesis in two related families of rhynchobdellids: piscicolids and glossiphoniids.  相似文献   

14.
Three different ovariole types exist in insects: panoistic, polytrophic- and telotrophic-meroistic. Their ontogenetic development is comparable to all insect orders. Each ovariole is composed of somatic tissues and germ cells.Panoistic ovarioles can be developed: (1) by totally blocking germ cell cluster division (e.g. in “primitive” insect orders; and (2) after germ cell cluster formation by final cleavage of cystocytes, which develop as oocytes (e.g. in stoneflies or thrips).Polytrophic-meroistic ovaries, showing a set of identical characters, are found among hemirnetabolous and holometabolous insects, indicating a “basic type” of common origin. One characteristic feature is the differentiation of only one oocyte, which is derived from one central cell of the cluster, whereas all other siblings are transformed into nurse cells.Telotrophic ovaries differ from polytrophic ovaries by retention of all nurse cells in the anterior trophic chamber. In addition, oocyte-nurse cell determination can be shifted towards more oocytes in a cluster, and clusters or subclusters can fuse by cell membrane reduction among nurse cells. This type of ovary developed independently 3 times from polytrophic ancestors and once in mayflies directly from panoistic ancestors.  相似文献   

15.
The developing ovaries of S. quercus contain a limited number of oogonial cells which undergo a series of incomplete mitotic divisions resulting in the formation of clusters of cystocytes. Ovaries of viviparous generations contain 6 to 9 clusters, containing 32 cystocytes each, whereas ovaries of oviparous generations contain 5 clusters containing 45-60 cystocytes. During further development, clusters become surrounded by a single layer of follicular cells, and within each cluster the cystocytes differentiate into oocytes and trophocytes (nurse cells). Concurrently, cysts transform into ovarioles. The anterior part of the ovariole containing the trophocytes becomes the tropharium, whereas its posterior part containing oocytes transforms into the vitellarium. The vitellaria of viviparous females are composed of one or two oocytes, which develop until previtellogenesis. The nuclei of previtellogenic oocytes enter cycles of mitotic divisions which lead to the formation of the embryo. Ovarioles of oviparous females contain a single oocyte which develops through three stages: previtellogenesis, vitellogenesis and choriogenesis. The ovaries are accompanied by large cells termed bacteriocytes which harbor endosymbiotic microorganisms.  相似文献   

16.
Developing ovaries of scale insects (Hemiptera : Coccinea) Nipaecoccus nipae (Pseudococcidae) and Cryptococcus fagisuga (Cryptococcidae) contain clusters of interconnected cells (cystocytes) that are arranged into rosettes; polyfusomes occur in the centres of the rosettes. Ovaries of the investigated adult scale insects are composed of numerous short telotrophic ovarioles. Tropharia (trophic chambers) of Dysmicoccus newsteadi (Pseudococcidae), Eriococcus buxi (Eriococcidae), Cryptococcus fagisuga and Pseudochermes fraxini (Cryptococcidae) comprise only trophocytes (nurse cells), whereas those of Kermes quercus (Kermesidae) and Gossyparia spuria (Eriococcidae) also contain arrested oocytes. The latter probably degenerate. It is suggested that during evolution of scale insects a gradual reduction of germ cells to 4 per cluster (3 trophocytes and 1 oocyte) took place. In light of the obtained results, anagenesis of scale insects ovarioles is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
A comparative cytological study was made of oogenesis in flies carrying various mutant alleles of the female sterile gene otu. It resides at 22.7 on the genetic map and within subdivision 7F of the cytological map of the X-chromosome. Each of the five ethyl methane sulfonate-induced mutations observed falls into one of three classes. In class 1, most mutant ovarioles lack germ cells; in class 2, most mutant ovarioles contain tumorous chambers; and in class 3 mutants, chambers occur that possess defective oocytes. The otu2 allele belongs to class 1; otu1 to class 2; and otu3, otu4, and otu5 to class 3. The mutations have no effects upon female viability or upon the viability and fertility of hemizygous males. Heterozygous females are fertile and have cytologically normal ovaries. In otu5 homozygotes, all ovarioles contain egg chambers, but oogenesis is prematurely terminated to produce a pseudo-stage 12 oocyte. Ovarioles from otu3 and from otu4 homozygotes contain both ovarian tumors and oocytes. Pseudonurse cells (PNC), which are cystocytes that have stopped dividing and have entered the nurse cell mode of development, are also abundant. PNCs contain polytene chromosomes. Since the homologs are paired, each nucleus has the haploid number of chromosomes. In chambers lacking an oocyte, the number of PNCs is less than the normal number of nurse cells. In chambers containing an oocyte, the number of accompanying nurse cells may be 15, or above or below normal. In vitellogenic chambers, the chromosomes in the nurse cells connected directly to the oocyte are more expanded than those in more distant nurse cells. The KA14 deficiency lacks the plus allele of otu. KA14 heterozygotes are fertile and have cytologically normal ovaries. When females carry KA14 and otu1, otu3, otu4, or otu5, 80% of their ovarioles are agametic. When females carry otu2 and one of the other mutant alleles, the ovarioles proceed further in development. So otu2 produces a product that has a beneficial effect on the test allele. When two different otu alleles are combined in a single fly, the phenotype of the hybrid ovary usually most resembles that of the ovary homozygous for the “stronger” allele (the otu mutant that allows oogenesis to proceed farthest). The results indicate that the product of the otu+ locus functions at least three different times during oogenesis; first to permit oogonia to proliferate, second to control the division and differentiation of germarial cystocytes, and third to facilitate the normal growth of the ooplasm. The gene product appears to be required in higher concentrations at each developmental period. The lesions produced by the mutations are thought to interfere with the stability or functioning of the gene product, and the ovarian phenotype produced by a given genotype depends upon the concentration of functional gene product available to the germ cells.  相似文献   

18.
Differentiated complexes of cystocytes in an apterygote insect (Diplura: Campodea sp.) are arranged in unbranched chains. Cystocyte lying approximately in the centre of a chain differentiate into the oocyte: two cells adjoining the oocyte and connected with it via cytoplasmic bridges develop into the 'intermediate cells'. Other cystocytes become typical 'nurse cells'. The intermediate cells are structurally transitional between oocytes and nurse cells. In this account, factors controlling the differentiation of oocytes and nurse cells are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The endoparasitic life of strepsipterans (Insecta), especially neotenic females, reduces to a great extent external and internal organs. Light and electron microscopic investigation of ovaries of Elenchus tenuicornis (Kirby) confirms the following: (1) somatic tissues of ovaries are totally reduced, with the exception of some cells surrounding germ cell clusters; (2) a previtellogenic growth phase of oocytes is reduced; (3) nurse cells remain diploid and their membranes degenerate at the onset of vitellogenesis; (4) vitellogenesis is reduced, vitellin and fat vacuoles contribute only 50% to the final egg volume; and (5) chorionogenesis is reduced to a vitellin membrane. However, some features of normal development remain, allowing classification of the ovary type as polytrophic meroistic: (1) germ cells undergo synchronized, incomplete divisions, following the 2n rule, where all former intercellular bridges become localized in one cystocyte, while the other has none; and (2) only one cell is determined as the oocyte, all other cystocytes serve as nurse cells and the surrounding somatic cells transform into follicular cells. Novel events in oogenesis of strepsipterans include fission of clusters during the phase of cluster mitoses, and protection of oocyte nuclei, while nurse cell nuclei degenerate in the same cytoplasm.  相似文献   

20.
Diatraea saccharalis F. is one of the greatest pests of the sugar cane culture. This report aimed to characterize the germarium region of the sugarcane borer by light and transmission electron microscopy, emphasizing the morphological steps of the ovarian cluster formation. In the germarium of this insect, four zones could be morphologically identified during the cluster formation. In the most apical end of each ovariole--Zone I--the germ line stem cells undergo complete mitotic division, originating the cystoblasts. In the Zone II, each cystoblast produces a group of eight cells, the cystocytes, which are interconnected by the ring canals. Clusters containing all the cystocytes in the meiosis, characterizes the Zone III. Germ cells with ultrastructural features of apoptosis are also detected in this Zone. In the Zone IV the cystocytes differentiate, morphologically, into one oocyte and seven nurse cells. Interstitial somatic cells and pre-follicle cells exhibit, in their cytoplasm, heterogeneous vacuoles containing degenerated cellular fragments, characterized as apoptotic bodies. Our results pointed out to the morphological evidences related with important control mechanisms for new clusters/follicles production and for the cellular arrangement into the germarium, resulting from the programmed cell death. We believe that the morphological characterization of ovarian cluster formation in D. saccharalis provided valuable information for the understanding of the initial steps of oogenesis and contributed for the knowledge of the cellular mechanisms related with the oocyte production and with reproduction in insects.  相似文献   

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