首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The structure of the reproductive organs of males and females of four species of Astroblepus were studied by light microscopy and TEM. In females, the gonadal and urinary orifices are separated. The urinary pore opens at the tip of a urinary papilla. In males, the testes conform to the anastomosing tubular type. Spermatogenesis is partially cystic, with most spermatid stages taking place within the lumen of the seminiferous tubules. The sperm ducts pass through seminal vesicles. The main sperm ducts fuse and join the urinary duct to form a urogenital duct that passes through to the tip of an long urogenital papilla. A circularly arranged skeletal muscle at the base of the urogenital papilla probably serves as a sphincter. The spermatozoon is an anacrosomal introsperm with an elongate, conical nucleus and an elongate midpiece. The midpiece contains numerous fused mitochondria that form rings within the cytoplasmic collar, but no vesicles were observed. The flagellum has a classic 9 + 2 axoneme with the A-tubules of the peripheral doublets being electron-dense. Two lateral fins on the posterior part of the flagellum have electron-dense termini. Nuclear chromatin is highly condensed, and the two centrioles are oriented perpendicularly to one another and are contained within a nuclear fossa.  相似文献   

2.
The spermatozoon of Hemirhamphodon pogonognalhus shows modifications that are frequent though not obligate in internally fertilizing sperm, notably elongation of the nucleus and extension of the mitochondria of the midpiece as an elongate sheath around the proximal region of the axoneme. These similarities to poecilid and jenynsid sperm are considered homoplasic. As in the mature sperm of all but one investigated teleost, an acrosome is absent. The elongate, blade-shaped, electron-dense nucleus has a mean length of 3.2 μm; its basal implantation fossa, less than one-tenth of the length of the nucleus, houses the anterior half of the distal and only centriole (of triplet construction with satellite rays), a centriolar plug, and a mass connecting the centriole to the wall of the fossa. A unilateral putative centriole adjunct is present. The anterior region of the axoneme is surrounded by a mitochondrial sleeve, and internal to this, separated by a cisterna, by a submitochondrial sleeve. The mitochondrial sleeve unites posteriorly with the submitochondrial sleeve. Between the submitochondrial sleeve and the axoneme is a space, the cytoplasmic canal, that is open to the exterior posteriorly. The discrete, cristate mitochondria, in their sleeve, are unique in investigated atherinomorph sperm in being bilateral, grouped on only two opposing sides of the axoneme, with an arc-shaped ‘intermitochondrial link’ between. The 9 + 2 flagellum is unique for the Animalia in having 23 radial subplasmalemmal rods, repeated longitudinally (periodicity 0.025 pm) in a quasicrystalline array. Internal fertilization is deduced to have arisen in the Exocoetoidei independently of that in the Cyprinidcntiformes.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of the spermatozoa and spermatogenesis of the lottiid limpet Patelloida latistrigata is described by transmission electron microscopy. Although the lengths of the spermatozoa (about 60 μm) and their head region (about 12 μm) are similar to those of other patellogastropods, the structure of the sperm head and midpiece are very different. The head consists of an unusually large acrosome (about 11-μm long) with a broad posterior invagination that houses the relatively small nucleus. The midpiece mitochondria, which are rather elongate with large folded tubular cristae, are housed in a cytoplasmic sheath posterior to the nucleus. The proximal centriole is unusually elongate (about 2-μm long). The axoneme that emerges from the distal centriole is surrounded anteriorly by the cytoplasmic sheath in which the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane has electron-dense material. The flagellum is enlarged at its terminal end. Spermatogenesis is similar to that described for other patellogastropods. Patelloida latistrigata, therefore, has spermatozoa that seem to meet the morphological criteria of ent-aquasperm, which raises the question of whether fertilization is truly external in this limpet. However, it is also possible that the modifications to the sperm are linked to unknown specializations of the egg or egg envelope.  相似文献   

4.
Jamieson  B. G. M. 《Zoomorphology》1982,100(3):177-188
Summary The spermatozoon of Haplotaxis ornamentus has characteristics common to all oligochaete sperm: filiform; primary acrosome vesicle carried on an acrosome tube and containing an axial rod (perforatorium) in an invagination (subvesicular space or secondary acrosomal invagination); an elongate, highly condensed cylindrical nucleus followed by a cylindrical midpiece of radially adpressed mitochondria not penetrated by the axoneme; a single (distal) centriole persistent, though modified, at maturity; axoneme with 9 doublets, each with two outer glycogen granules, and centrally two singlets accompanied by two solid fibres. A peculiar haplotaxid combination of characters (none unique) is slight withdrawal of the primary vesicle into the acrosome tube with a strongly emergent capitulate axial rod and moderately short midpiece. This ultrastructure is consistent with location of the Haplotaxidae at the base of the Haplotaxida (Haplotaxina — Alluroidina — Moniligastrina — Lumbricina). Tubificida sperm, although also plesiomorph for the Oligochaeta, have the autapomorphy elongate periaxial sheath (secondary tube), excepting the Phreodrilidae whose sperm show convergent resemblances to the Lumbricina. The term annuloid has been introduced for annulus-like structures of varied origins.  相似文献   

5.
The structure of mature and developing euspermatozoa of the rissoacean gastropod Stenothyra sp. has been studied using transmission electron microscopy. During cuspermiogenesis nuclei pass through fibrillar and lamellar phases of condensation. A Golgi-derived acrosome attaches to the nucleus during the fibrillar phase. Spherical mitochondria of early euspermatids fuse to form the mitochondrial sheath which undergoes metamorphosis to form helical midpiece elements, paracrystalline material and helical midpiece compartments. Mature euspermatozoa consist of a flat acrosome (acrosomal cone, axial rod, basal plate), short curved nucleus (2.5–2.8 μm) and elongate midpiece and glycogen piece. Coarse fibres associated with the axoneme emerge from a posterior invagination of the nucleus and continue into the initial portion of the midpiece. In the proximal portion of the midpiece, two helical compartments (filled with membranous material) are present—only one of which persists further posteriorly. No compartments occur in the distal region of the midpiece. Posterior to the midpiece, the axoneme is surrounded by tightly-packed (glycogen) granules and terminates within this region. The distal end of the euspermatozoon consists solely of glycogen granules surrounded by the plasma membrane. Although coarse fibres (associated with the axoneme), midpiece paracrystalline material and helical compartments are commonly reported in sperm of euthyneuran gastropods, this represents the first report of all three features in any prosobranch euspermatozoon.  相似文献   

6.
G. W. Rouse 《Acta zoologica》1988,69(4):205-216
The fine structure of the spermatozoa of two spionids is described. The spermatozoon of Prionospio cf. queenslandica is typical of an animal utilizing external fertilization, in having a subspheroidal nucleus, a midpiece composed of unmodified rounded mitochondria surrounding two centrioles and a free flagellum. The acrosome is unusual in showing bilateral symmetry. The spermatozoon of Tripolydora sp. resembles that of spionids utilizing spermatophores, in possessing an extremely elongate nucleus and midpiece. The nucleus is penetrated by the 9+2 axoneme for its entire length, linking with a single centriole at the anterior end. Platelets surround the nucleus and intermingle with the mitochondria of the midpiece, which terminates with an annulus. The acrosome shows some internal vesiculation and substructuring. Sperm structure in relation to reproductive methods is discussed and the view of external fertilization as primitive is questioned.  相似文献   

7.
The spermatids are connected to a central cytophore by cytoplasmic bridges and are polarized in the sequence: "empty cytoplasm"; uncondensed nucleus; mitochondria which surround the distal region of the nucleus and the centrioles; axoneme; posterolateral to the base of the axoneme, the Golgi apparatus and (when secreted) the acrosomal rudiment. The dome-shaped acrosome vesicle elongates progressively as it migrates to the tip of the elongating and condensing nucleus; subacrosomal material gives rise to an almost equally long, tubular, thick-walled perforatorium. After the acrosome has greatly elongated, the mitochondria are reduced to two, which lose their rounded form and invest the growing axoneme to give a very elongate midpiece. Transfer of materials from nucleus to mitochondria is discussed. Microtubules surrounding the acrosome and nucleus disappear by maturity, but those internal to the mitochrondria apparently persist as the accessory microtubules, unique in the Annelida, which surround the 9 + 2 axoneme. Microvilli of the egg envelope, which have tetrads of terminal branches (epivitelline projections) resembling epicuticular projections, are less than 1 μm long, whereas the mature acrosome exceeds 5 μm. This suggests that the correlation seen in oligochaetes is absent.  相似文献   

8.
The spermatozoa of Thunnus thynnus and Euthynnus alletteratus consist of an acrosome-less head (comprising the ovoid nucleus and the short midpiece) and a long flagellar tail that contains the conventional 9 + 2 axoneme and lacks lateral fins. The centrioles are arranged at approximately right angles and lie outside of a shallow nuclear groove. The flagellum inserts laterally on the nucleus, therefore the spermatozoon is asymmetrical. The midpiece contains a few mitochondria which are separated from the axoneme by the cytoplasmic canal; they are spherical in T. thynnus and elongate, somewhat irregular in E. alletteratus . Although the main ultrastructural characteristics of the spermatozoa appear to indicate a great homogeneity in the sperm morphology within the family Scombridae, small species-specific divergences may be of use in systematics.  相似文献   

9.
The spermatozoon of Tubiluchus troglodytes, the first priapulid formally described from the Mediterranean Sea has a head composed of an acrosome and a nucleus. The acrosome is divided in two branches coiled around the nucleus. The nucleus is basally columnar, but apically generates two rods helically coiled one around the other. The midpiece is formed by an axoneme with 27 accessory microtubules, surrounded by three mitochondria. An annulus separates the midpiece from the tail that contains a 9 + 2 axoneme surrounded by nine accessory microtubules. The spermatozoon of T. troglodytes is similar to that of the other two species known from the genus, and completely different from the 'primitive' one of the other priapulids. Since Tubiluchus is considered the most basal of the extant priapulids, and the only genus with an internal fertilization, it may be that in priapulids the external fertilization is a derived character.  相似文献   

10.
In Cristatella mucedo spermiogenesis occurs in a morula consisting of a large number of spermatids connected with a central cytophore. The mature sperm cell is filiform and consists of a head, a midpiece and a tail region, the latter two separated by a deep circular constriction. The comparatively short head contains a drop-shaped, bilaterally symmetrical and pointed nucleus capped by a minute acrosome. The single centriole is placed in a deep posterior invagination of the nucleus followed by the axoneme with the typical 9 + 2 pattern. The elongated midpiece is 0.9–1.1 μm thick and contains several helices of mitochondria surrounding the axoneme. The tail is thicker (1.3 μm) and richer in cytoplasm with many compact accumulations of an electron-dense substance lying peripherally and another less dense material wrapped around the axoneme. The course of the spermiogenesis and the fine structure of the sperm are very similar to that of Plumatella fungosa. Comparison with other species shows that the same sperm type is recognizable in four of the five families of Phylactolaemata and, provided it occurs also in the fifth family, the Stephanellidae, is a synapomorphy of the entire class.  相似文献   

11.
Sperm ultrastructure is described for the first time in representativesof the pulmonate ‘limpet’ families Trimusculidae(Trimusculus costatus, T. reticulatus: marine) and Ancylidae(Burnupia stenochorias, Ancylus fluviatilis: freshwater). Allshow characteristic heterobranch sperm features (a spheroidalacrosomal vesicle supported by an acrosomal pedestal; a helicallykeeled nucleus and a complex, very elongate midpiece featuringparacrystalline and matrix layers sheathing the axoneme, coarsefibers and one or more glycogen helices). Posterior to the midpiece,a glycogen piece (axoneme sheathed by glycogen granules) andannulus are also present in all species. Taxonomically usefuldifferences in the shape and dimensions of the acrosome, nucleusand midpiece occur between the species. Results support thedecision of recent workers to transfer the Trimusculidae fromthe Siphonarioidea to a separate superfamily Trimusculoidea(characteristic sperm features including: narrow acrosomal pedestaloverlapping with nuclear apex; heavily keeled nucleus; midpiecewith strongly projecting secondary and glycogen helices). Therelationship of the Trimusculoidea to other pulmonates, as indicatedby sperm ultrastructure, remains uncertain largely because comparativedata for several important groups are unavailable. Spermatozoaof the two ancylids most closely resemble those of other investigatedplanor-boideans and to a lesser extent, those of the Lym-naeoidea.However, differences between Burnupia stenochorias (unique(?)accessory structure on the acrosomal pedestal; glycogen wedgeswithin the nuclear fossa; other features similar to planorbids)and Ancylus fluviatilis (all sperm features very similar toplanorbids) suggests that these patelliform ancylids are notclosely related. (Received 20 November 1997; accepted 23 January 1998)  相似文献   

12.
The differentiation of spermatids in Hoplias malabaricus is characterized by chromatin compaction, flagellum development, nuclear rotation, nuclear fossa formation, and excess cytoplasm elimination. In the resulting spermatozoon, the head is round and the nucleus contains chromatin compacted in thick filaments, peripherically arranged, to a central electron-lucent area. The acrosome is absent. The nuclear fossa is eccentric but not pronounced. The proximal centriole penetrates it and is oblique to the flagellum. The long midpiece has several converging elongate vesicles, forming membranous hoops in the initial segment of the flagellum, but has no cytoplasmic channel. The mitochondria are elongate and branched or C-shaped and located around the initial segment of the axoneme. The lateral flagellum does not show lateral projections. The ultrastructural characteristics of H.malabaricus spermatozoa are similar to the Cypriniformes.  相似文献   

13.
Studies on the sperm morphology in scorpions are rare, but the existing investigations already revealed a remarkable interfamiliar diversity. The present study reports for the first time on the spermatozoa and sperm packages of a representative of the family Troglotayosicidae, the troglophylous species Belisarius xambeui. The spermatozoa are characterized by (1) a thread-like nucleus, which is slightly bent anteriorly; (2) an asymmetrical cap-like acrosomal vacuole, which encloses the anterior tip of the nucleus; an acrosomal filament is absent; (3) an axoneme with a 9 + 0 microtubular pattern; (4) a midpiece consisting of elongated mitochondria coiling around the axoneme; the number can vary between 3 and 6 (mostly 4). At the end of spermiogenesis, the spermatozoa aggregate in order to form oval-shaped sperm packages in which all sperm cells show the same orientation. A single package consists of approximately 150 sperms. A secretion sheath is always absent. The present results might provide new characters for further systematic studies and their phylogenetic implications are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The sperm of Caprimulgus europaeus is typical of other nonpasserines in many respects. Features shared with Paleognathae and Galloanserae are the conical acrosome, shorter than the nucleus; the presence of a perforatorium and endonuclear canal; the presence of a proximal as well as distal centriole; the elongate midpiece with mitochondria grouped around a central axis (here maximally six mitochondria in approximately 10 tiers); and the presence of a fibrous or amorphous sheath around the principal piece of the axoneme. A major (apomorphic) difference from paleognaths and galloanserans is the short distal centriole, the midpiece being penetrated for most of its length by the axoneme and for only a very short proximal portion by the centriole. Nonpasserines differ from paleognaths in that the latter have a transversely ribbed fibrous sheath, whereas in nonpasserines it is amorphous, as in Caprimulgus, or absent. The absence of an annulus is an apomorphic feature of Caprimulgus, apodiform, psittaciform, gruiform, and passerine sperm, homoplastic in at least some of these. In contrast to passerines, in Caprimulgus the cytoplasmic microtubules in the spermatid are restricted to a transient longitudinal manchette. The structure of the spermatid and spermatozoon is consistent with placement of the Caprimulgidae near the Psittacidae, but is less supportive of close proximity to the Apodidae, from DNA-DNA hybridization and some other analyses.  相似文献   

16.
Rota E  Lupetti P 《Tissue & cell》1997,29(5):603-609
The mature spermatozoa of the terrestrial non-clitellate annelid Hrabeiella periglandulata Pizl & Chalupsky, 1984 s.l. were examined using light and electron microscopy. They are about 150 mum long, filiform and extremely slender (maximum diameter, 450-475 nm). The acrosome is very elongate (about 25 mum), tapering and conical. Its transverse section is circular apically but shows an evident six-rayed symmetry in its basal region. The nucleus appears convex at both ends; apically, it extends laterally into the acrosome, and basally, it plugs into the centriolar region. The nucleus is about 23 mum long and has a rounded, tri- to pentalobed, slightly helical profile. The midpiece contains one elongate, free (paraxonemal) mitochondrion, 27 accessory tubules, which are slightly larger and more opaque than the axonemal microtubules; and seven electron-dense, non-membrane-bounded rods distributed around the axoneme. The flagellum tapers rapidly posteriorly. None of the observed similarities to the sperm (introsperm) of questids, protodrilids or other polychaetes seems to represent an immediate synapomorphy. None of the spermatozoal autapomorphies of the Euclitellata is shared by Hrabeiella.  相似文献   

17.
Ultrastructural observations on spermiogenesis and spermatozoa of selected pyramidellid gastropods (species ofTurbonilla, Pyrgulina, Cingulina andHinemoa) are presented. During spermatid developement, the condensing nucleus becomes initially anterio-posteriorly compressed or sometimes cup-shaped. Concurrently, the acrosomal complex attaches to an electrondense layer at the presumptive anterior pole of the nucleus, while at the opposite (posterior) pole of the nucleus a shallow invagination is formed to accommodate the centriolar derivative. Midpiece formation begins soon after these events have taken place, and involves the following processes: (1) the wrapping of individual mitochondria around the axoneme/coarse fibre complex; (2) later internal metamorphosis resulting in replacement of cristae by paracrystalline layers which envelope the matrix material; and (3) formation of a glycogen-filled helix within the mitochondrial derivative (via a secondary wrapping of mitochondria). Advanced stages of nuclear condensation (elongation, transformation of fibres into lamellae, subsequent compaction) and midpiece formation proceed within a microtubular sheath (‘manchette’). Pyramidellid spermatozoa consist of an acrosomal complex (round to ovoid apical vesicle; column-shaped acrosomal pedestal), helically-keeled nucleus (short, 7–10 μm long, shallow basal invagination for axoneme/coarse fibre attachment), elongate helical midpiece (composed of axoneme, coarse fibres, paracrystalline and matrix materials, glycogen-filled helix), glycogen piece (length variable, preceeded by a dense ring structure at junction with midpiece). The features of developing and mature spermatozoa observed in the Pyramidellidae are as observed in opisthobranch and pulmonate gastropods indicating that the Pyramidelloidea should be placed within the Euthyneura/Heterobranchia, most appropriately as a member group of the Opisthobranchia.  相似文献   

18.
The approximately 50 μm long sperm of Cymatoguster aggregata is composed of an elongate head (4 μm), an elongate mitochondria1 midpiece (3.5 μm) and a tail flagellum (roughly 40 μm). The sperm lacks an acrosome. Contained within depressions on one surface of the compressed head are a proximal centriole and a distal centriole separated by an electron dense, intercentriolar body. The anterior portion of the tail flagellum originates at the basal body (distal centriole) and is contained within an extracellular, flagellar tunnel within the mitochondria1 midpiece. The morphological similarity of C. uggregutu sperm to sperm of other internally fertilizing fishes supports the hypothesis that spermatozoan morphology is related to the mode of fertilization and that an elongate head and midpiece are specializations for internal fertilization.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract. The sabellid polychaete, Terebrasabella heterouncinata, forms burrows in gastropod shells. It is a small, intratubular brooder that breeds semi‐continuously. It has been shown to self‐fertilize, but its reproductive biology suggests that some form of sperm transfer must occur between individuals. To gain an understanding of its fertilization biology, the ultrastructure of spermiogenesis and the sperm in T. heterouncinata was described, and the animal examined for sperm storage structures. Spermiogenesis occurs in clusters of eight spermatids. The mature sperm has an elongate nucleus and a bilaterally symmetrical acrosome with twisted subacrosomal spaces. The midpiece is short, with three crescent‐shaped mitochondria, and forms a tight sheath around the axoneme. A single spermatheca, which opens on the inner ventral part of the crown near the buccal region, is present. It is a simple blind‐ending duct that runs below the ventral nerve cord and is longer than 100 μm. This is the first record of a single spermatheca in Sabellidae. The shape of the sperm and the presence of a spermatheca confirm that individuals of T. heterouncinata produce ent‐aquasperm and would normally cross‐fertilize.  相似文献   

20.
The spermatozoon of Chiton marginatus is a long uniflagellate cell displaying structural features of “modified sperm.” The nucleus presents a conical shape with a long apical cylindrical extension. The chromatin is homogeneously dense. Scattered inside the condensed nucleus, a few nuclear lacunae are visible. The acrosomal complex is lacking. Some mitochondria are located in a laterofrontal structure side by side with the nucleus. The typical midpiece is absent. The cytoplasm forms a thin layer around the nucleus and the mitochondria. The proximal centriole is in a basal nuclear indent. The distal centriole serves to form the axoneme tail with the usual microtubular pattern. During nuclear maturation, the early spermatid nucleus is spherical and contains fine granular chromatin patches. The nuclear envelope shows a deposit of dense material at the base of the nucleus, forming a semicircular invagination occupied by a flocculent mass. In middle spermatid stage, the chromatin gets organized in filaments, coiled as a hank, attached over the inner surface of the basal thickening of the nuclear envelope. The nucleus starts to elongate anteroposteriorly. At the pointed apical portion of the spermatid, a group of microtubules is observed seeming to impose external pressure to the nucleus giving rise to the long apical nuclear point. The mitochondria have a basal position. Late spermatids have an elongated conical nucleus. The chromatin filaments are further condensed, and lacunae appear inside the nucleus. Some mitochondria migrate to a lateral position.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号