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1.
Small pieces of the sperm sacs of Lumbricus herculeus were fixed for 4 hours in chrome-osmium, embedded in methacrylate, sectioned with a Porter-Blum microtome, and studied with a R.C.A. EMU-2C electron microscope. Each spermatid of a group developing synchronously is attached by a cytoplasmic strand to a common nutrient protoplasmic mass. This mass contains mitochondria and yolk bodies but is anucleate. The proximal centriole, that is, the centriole nearer the nucleus, is at first associated with a small peg which becomes firmly attached to the nuclear membrane. Later these two bodies become separated during the development of the middle-piece which is differentiated in the usual manner from a nebenkern formed by the fusion of 6 or 7 mitochondria. The acrosome develops in relation to the dictyosome (Golgi body), itself composed of 8 or more individual flattened sacs and situated in the cytoplasm opposite the point of attachment of the spermatid to the nutrient mass. Soon after its formation, the acrosome becomes incorporated into a cytoplasmic appendage or acrosome carrier. The carrier moves from its original position, along the lateral border of the elongating nucleus, to the distal margin of the nucleus where the acrosome is deposited. No evidence was found of a centriole located at the point of junction between nucleus and acrosome as suggested by earlier workers.  相似文献   

2.
The general organization of the male genital system, the spermatogenesis and the sperm structure of the proturan Acerella muscorum have been described. At the apex of testis apical huge cells are present; their cytoplasm contains a conventional centriole, a large amount of dense material and several less electron-dense masses surrounded by mitochondria. Spermatocytes have normal centrioles and are interconnected by cytoplasmic bridges. Such bridges seem to be absent between spermatid cells and justify the lack of synchronization of cell maturation. Spermatids are almost globular cells with a spheroidal nucleus and a large mass of dense material corresponding to the centriole adjunct. Within this mass a centriole is preserved. Mitochondria of normal structure are located between the nucleus and the plasma membrane. The spermatids are surrounded by a thick membrane. No flagellar structure is formed. Sperm have a compact spheroidal nucleus, a large cap of centriole adjunct material within which a centriole is still visible. A layer of mitochondria is located over the nucleus. The cytoplasm is reduced in comparison to spermatids; many dense bodies are interspersed with sperm in the testicular lumen. The sperm are small, immotile cells of about 2.5-3 μm in diameter.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Developmental changes in the formation of the centrioles and flagellum during spermiogenesis in the rooster and drake were studied.Changes in the length and thickness of the wall of the centrioles were observed from an early stage of spermatid development. Before the proximal centriole is attached to the nucleus microtubules were observed near the centrioles joined to them. At this stage of spermatid development changes on the nuclear membrane were observed at a place where the proximal centriole is attached to the nucleus. At the later stage of spermatid differentiation three to five dense extensions in the space of the nuclear invagination and dense bodies or granules near the distal centriole were present. The anterior part of the newly formed flagellum is covered by a cytoplasmic membrane displaying extension which is approximately 1.3 m long. Slight differences between the two species were observed.  相似文献   

4.
Spermiogenesis, known as spermateleosis in lower vertebrates, is the transformation of the round spermatid into a highly specialized spermatozoon with a species-specific structure. Spermateleosis and sperm morphology of two species of caecilians, Ichthyophis tricolor and Uraeotyphlus cf. narayani, from the Western Ghats of Kerala, India, were studied using light and transmission electron microscopy. Spermateleosis is described in early, mid-, and late phases. During the early phase, the spermatid nucleus does not elongate, but the acrosome vesicle is Golgi-derived and its material is produced as a homogeneous substance rather than as discrete granules. In development of the acrosome, the centrioles shift in position to the lower half of the cell. The acrosomal vesicles take the full shape of the acrosome with the establishment of the perforatorium in midphase. An endonuclear canal develops and accommodates the perforatorium. The incipient flagellum is laid down when the proximal centriole attaches to the posterior side of the nucleus and the distal centriole connects to the proximal centriole, which forms the basal granule of the acrosome. The axial fiber also appears during midphase. The mitochondria shift in position to the posterior pole of the cell to commence establishment of the midphase. Late phase is characterized by nuclear condensation and elongation. Consequently, the final organization of the sperm is established with the head containing the nucleus and the acrosome. The undulating membrane separates the axoneme and axial fiber. Most of the cytoplasm is lost as residual bodies.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetic apparatus, the acrosome and associated structures, and the manchette of the spermatid of the domestic chicken have been studied with the electron microscope. The basic structural features of the two centrioles do not change during spermiogenesis, but there is a change in orientation and length. The proximal centriole is situated in a groove at the edge of the nucleus and oriented normal to the long axis of the nucleus and at right angles to the elongate distal centriole. The tail filaments appear to originate from the distal centriole. The plasma membrane is invaginated along the tail filaments. A dense structure which appears at the deep reflection of the plasma membrane is identified as the ring. The fine structure of the ring has no resemblance to that of a centriole and there is no evidence that it is derived from or related to the centrioles. The tail of the spermatid contains nine peripheral pairs and one central pair of tubular filaments. The two members of each pair of peripheral filaments differ in density and in shape: one is dense and circular, and the other is light and semilunar in cross-section. The dense filaments have processes. A manchette consisting of fine tubules appears in the cytoplasm of the older spermatid along the nucleus, neck region, and proximal segment of the tail. The acrosome is spherical in young spermatids and becomes crescentic and, finally, U-shaped as spermiogenesis proceeds. A dense granule is observed in the cytoplasm between acrosome and nucleus. This granule later becomes a dense rod which is interpreted as the perforatorium.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The fine structure of the developing spermatids and the mature sperm of Nippostrongylus brasiliensis was investigated. Immature spermatids are found at one end of the tubelike testis, and the mature sperm at the other. The spermatid has a prominent nucleus, with the chromatin clumped at the margin. It also contains a pair of centrioles, located near the nucleus. The cytoplasm is filled with ribosomal clusters, but it lacks an organized Golgi area or endoplasmic reticulum. Besides the normal mitochondria, the spermatid has specialized mitochondrionlike inclusions with dense matrix, few broad cristae, and a crystalloid structure always facing the nucleus. As spermiogenesis proceeds, the nucleus elongates, comes to lie at one end, and later evaginates to form a separate head structure, leaving the mitochondria and other cytoplasmic organelles in a broad cytoplasmic region. The nuclear material becomes filamentous and spiral, and the centrioles come to lie at one end near the junction of the head and the cytoplasmic portion of the sperm. Microtubules are found in the cytoplasmic region extending from the tubelike nucleus. The specialized mitochondria are about eighteen in number, and are arranged in rows in staggered groups of three around the microtubules in the cytoplasmic region. The mature sperm is aflagellate and lacks an acrosome. No movement of the sperm was ever observed.  相似文献   

8.
Summary In the present electron microscopic study of spermatogenesis in the crayfish, Cambaroides japonicus, it was possible to clarify several aspects of the unusual differentiation which leads to the production of an aflagellate sperm. The centriole is followed from the metaphase of the second spermatocyte division to the time at which, in the nearly mature sperm, it appears to disintegrate. It has no connection with the acrosome but in the late spermatid and maturing sperm it is found randomly oriented among the convoluted membranes of the filamentous endoplasmic reticulum.There appears to be a close association of mitochondria with the developing acrosomal vesicle. Typical mitochondria, however, are not present after the late spermatid stage of development. It is suggested that the complex lamellar bodies associated with the nuclear envelope in the late stages of spermatogenesis may be related to mitochondria for these lamellar bodies resemble the complex mitochondria found in the adjacent nutritive cells.The development of the acrosome has been traced from an aggregate of dense granules which first appear in the interzonal spindle region and are later segregated at one side of the cell after the second spermatocyte division. As differentiation proceeds, tubular elements appear and disappear within the acrosome, while somewhat later, fibrous elements appear in the matrix. In the mature acrosome, the fibrous elements remain only adjacent to the granular periphery of the acrosome and the core again becomes homogeneous.No typical Golgi complex is found in these cells at any time during their differentiation.In the maturing sperm the development of the arms of the nucleus was studied. Preceding the differentiation of the arms a coarse fibrous material develops in the periphery of the nucleus. It is shown that the fibrillar material in the matrix of the arms is in continuity with the fibrillar material in the matrix of the nucleus proper.Supported in part by Grant No. B 2314 of the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness, U.S. Public Health Service.Predoctoral Research Fellow of the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness, U.S. Public Health Service.  相似文献   

9.
Spermiogenesis of the eupyrene sperm in the snail, Fusitriton oregonensis, was studied with light and electron microscopes. Endoplasmic reticulum, which encircles the nucleus in each spermatid, appears to connect with the Golgi body and to interconnect between adjacent spermatids via cytoplasmic bridges. It is suggested that as the Golgi body migrates around the nucleus the endoplasmic reticulum may circulate with it. The alignment of the proacrosome with the nucleus is effected by a 180° rotation of the Golgi body, after which it separates and migrates posteriorly with the residual cytoplasm. Each sperm possesses a well-developed intracellular digestive system as indicated by multivesicular bodies, residual bodies, and myeloid figures. Autophagy begins in the residual cytoplasm before it is released from the middle piece. Microtubules are found outside the nucleus and mitochondria during the final stages of spermiogenesis, when elongation is almost complete. These microtubules appear to be involved in the final shaping and twisting process, in which torsion is locked in the nucleus and the mitochondria spiral around the axoneme. The annulus attaches the distal centriole to the plasma membrane in the early spermatid and as flagellar production begins they move towards the implantation fossa at the base of the nucleus. There are two centrioles in the early spermatid, the distal centriole and procentriole. The small procentriole fuses with the distal centriole in the intranuclear canal to form the centriolar cap of the basal body. This cap is pushed through the end of the nuclear tube and is separated from the subacrosomal space by only the nuclear membranes.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
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   

12.
The ultrastructur of spermatozoa and the changes through which they are differentiated during sperm formation in an echiuroid were observed under the electron microscope. Many spermatids are connected to one central cytoplasmic mass and the sperm differentiation proceeds synchronously in one sperm-ball. Dense plate-like structures appear in the cytoplasm of early spermatids and disappear soon. In the process of nuclear condensation, many electron-dense aggregates appear in homogeneously textured chromonema and the aggregates are packed together to form a uniformly dense nucleus. Near the centriole at the opposite side from the central mass, the mitochondria fuse together to form one large middle-piece mitochondrion and the acrosomal vesicle is formed from the Golgi-complex. The differentiating acrosome in the late spermatid moves to the anterior tip of the head. In the completed acrosome, a flocculent substance accumulates in the conspicuously expanded invaginated pocket of the acrosomal vesicle and two kinds of material of different electron density fill the inside of the acrosomal vesicle. The spermatozoa remain connected to the central mass at the lateral side of the head until they become fully mature and are packed into the nephridia before spawning.  相似文献   

13.
In the course of the reorganization and degeneration of the proximal centriole in the mature acentriolate spermatozoon of the Mongolian gerbil, both the proximal and distal centrioles appear in the early cap phase of spermatid development. During the acrosome phase, both distal and proximal centrioles become highly active in the formation of a segmented column. The proximal centriole becomes actively involved in the formation of the capitulum, while the distal centriole forms the axonemal complex and dense fibers. During the maturation phase of spermatid development, the “pinwheel” arrangement of the proximal centriole becomes an “S”-shaped structure, turned 90° on its vertical axis. The few “doublet” microtubules that can be detected later in that stage completely disappear during spermiation. The distal centriolar area develops a single central pair of microtubules and membranous elements. Another prominent feature in the neck region of the gerbil spermatozoa is the presence of two dense rudimentary columns in association with the mitochondria. Although their density is similar to that of the other columns, these two columns have no connection with the dense fibers; in fact, they are closely associated with the mitochondria.  相似文献   

14.
Testicular spermatozoa and sperm development in the archaeogastropod Calliotropis glyptus Watson (Trochoidae: Trochidae) are examined using transmission electron microscopy and formalin-fixed tissues. During spermiogenesis, the acrosome, formed evidently through fusion of Golgi-derived proacrosomal vesicles, becomes deeply embedded in the condensing spermatid nucleus. Two centrioles (proximal and distal), both showing triplet microtubular substructure, are present in spermatids—the distal centriole giving rise to the sperm tail and its associated rootlet. During formation of the basal invagination in the spermatid nucleus, centrioles, and rootlet move towards the nucleus and come to lie totally within the basal invagination. Mitochondria are initially positioned near the base of the nucleus but subsequently become laterally displaced. Morphology of the mature spermatozoon is modified from that of the classic primitive or ect-aquasperm type by having 1) the acrosome embedded in the nucleus (the only known example within the Mollusca), 2) a deep basai invagination in the nucleus containing proximal and distal centrioles and an enveloping matrix (derived from the rootlet), 3) laterally displaced periaxonemal mitochondria, and 4) a tail extending from the basal invagination of the nucleus. Implantation of the acrosomal complex and centrioles within imaginations of the nucleus and lateral displacement of mitochondria effectively minimize the length of the sperm head and midpiece. Such modifications may be associated with motility demands, but this remains to be established. The unusual features of C. glyptus spermatozoa, though easily derivable from ‘typical’ trochoid sperm architecture, may prove useful in delineating the genus Calliotropis or tracing its relationship to other genera within the trochid subfamily Margaritinae.  相似文献   

15.
东方扁虾精子发生的超微结构   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
应用电镜技术研究了东方扁虾(Thenus orientalis)精子发生的全过程,精原细胞呈椭圆形,其染色质分布较均匀,线粒体集中于细胞一端形成“线粒体区”。初级精母细胞较大,染色质凝聚成块,次级精母细胞核质间常出现大的囊泡,胞质内囊泡丰富而线粒体数量却明显减少,早期精细胞核发生极化、解聚,部分胞质被抛弃。中期精细胞外观呈金字塔形,分为三区;正在形成的顶体位于塔顶,核位于塔基部,居间的细胞质基质内富含膜复合物,后期精细胞顶体进一步分化。形成顶体帽和内、外顶体物质等三个结构组份。成熟精子核呈盘状或碗状,具有5-6条内部充满微管的辐射臂。  相似文献   

16.
泥螺精子发生的超微结构研究   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
利用透岸民镜观察了泥螺精子发生的过程。结果表明;泥螺精子发生经历了一系列重要的形态和结构变化,主要有核逐渐延长,染色质浓缩,顶体形成,线粒体逐步发达与融合,胞质消除及鞭毛的形成等。泥螺精细胞分化可分为3个时期,在精细细胞分化过程中,细胞核形态及染色质的变化与其他软体动物有较大的差异,核内椭圆形到肾形,再变化为长圆柱形;染色质由絮状颗粒变为细纤维丝状,再变为长纤维丝状,最后向高电子密度均质状态转变,初步探讨了泥螺精子发生过程中核及细胞器的超微结构变化在分类上的意义。  相似文献   

17.
The spermatozoa of Petrobius and Lepisma share a few general insect features (filamentous shape, two mitochondria, compact acrosome vesicle, bilateral symmetry) but differ fundamentally with regard to specializations. In Petrobius, a long coiled acrosome, a coiled nucleus, and a “body” with axonema, two mitochondria, and a pair of lateral bodies follow each other in normal sequence. In Lepisma the acrosome is a small vestige in the spoon-shaped anterior end, the centriole is dislocated anteriorly, and nucleus, two mitochondria and axonema run like parallel filaments through most of the spermatozoon. The centriole adjunct develops into a postnuclear body in Lepisma but forms a pair of complicated “lateral bodies” in Petrobius. It is concluded that ancestral forms must have had fairly primitive spermatozoa and that specialization has proceeded independently within each evolutionary line.  相似文献   

18.
Sperm ultrastructure and spermiogenesis of the three bivalve species Musculus discors, Nucula sulcata, and Dreissena polymorpha have been studied. During spermatid differentiation in Musculus discors and Nucula sulcata the nucleus attains an elongated rod-like shape. The spermatozoon from Nucula sulcata was found to have a cup-shaped acrosome and five mitochondria surrounding two centrioles in the middle piece. The spermatozoa from Musculus discors has a long complex acrosome. From the distal centriole striated processes extend and attach to the plasma membrane. The spermatozoon of the fresh water species Dreissena polymorpha agrees in all main features with those of other invertebrate groups with external fertilization. It is thus of the primitive type with barrel-shaped nucleus and four to five mitochondria1 spheres in the middle piece. The acrosome is a prominant, complex structure at the apex of the mature spermatozoon. A comparison of sperm ultrastructure among bivalves indicates that there is a certain correlation between the evolution of the elongated sperm nucleus and large, yolk-rich eggs. In species with an elongated sperm nucleus the increased egg size has often led to a lecithotrophic or direct development. The elongated nucleus is a slight modification of the primitive type. There is a great variation in acrosome structure among bivalve spermatozoa, reflecting diverging functional demands at fertilization of the eggs.  相似文献   

19.
Testicular samples were collected to describe the ultrastructure of spermiogenisis in Alligator mississipiensis (American Alligator). Spermiogenesis commences with an acrosome vesicle forming from Golgi transport vesicles. An acrosome granule forms during vesicle contact with the nucleus, and remains posterior until mid to late elongation when it diffuses uniformly throughout the acrosomal lumen. The nucleus has uniform diffuse chromatin with small indices of heterochromatin, and the condensation of DNA is granular. The subacrosome space develops early, enlarges during elongation, and accumulates a thick layer of dark staining granules. Once the acrosome has completed its development, the nucleus of the early elongating spermatid becomes associated with the cell membrane flattening the acrosome vesicle on the apical surface of the nucleus, which aids in the migration of the acrosomal shoulders laterally. One endonuclear canal is present where the perforatorium resides. A prominent longitudinal manchette is associated with the nuclei of late elongating spermatids, and less numerous circular microtubules are observed close to the acrosome complex. The microtubule doublets of the midpiece axoneme are surrounded by a layer of dense staining granular material. The mitochondria of the midpiece abut the proximal centriole resulting in a very short neck region, and possess tubular cristae internally and concentric layers of cristae superficially. A fibrous sheath surrounds only the axoneme of the principal piece. Characters not previously described during spermiogenesis in any other amniote are observed and include (1) an endoplasmic reticulum cap during early acrosome development, (2) a concentric ring of endoplasmic reticulum around the nucleus of early to middle elongating spermatids, (3) a band of endoplasmic reticulum around the acrosome complex of late developing elongate spermatids, and (4) midpiece mitochondria that have both tubular and concentric layers of cristae. J. Morphol., 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The present study examines spermiogenesis, and in particular the formation of the acrosome, in ten species of chitons belonging to four families. This study emphasizes the formation of the acrosome but brings to light several other structures that have received little or no mention in previous studies. The process of spermiogenesis is essentially similar in each species, although Chaetopleura exhibits some significant differences. In early spermiogenesis the Golgi body secretes numerous small pro-acrosomal vesicles that gradually migrate into the apical cytoplasm. The chromatin condenses from granules into fibres which become twisted within the nucleus. A small bundle of chromatin fibres projects from the main nuclear mass into the anterior filament; this coincides with the appearance of a developing manchette of microtubules around the nucleus that originates from the two centrioles. Radiating from the distal centriole is the centriolar satellite complex, which is attached to the plasma membrane by the annulus. The distal centriole produces the flagellum posteriorly and it exits eccentrically through a ring of folded membrane that houses the annulus. Extending from the annulus on one side of the flagellum, in all but one species, is a dense fibrous body that has not been previously reported. The proximal centriole lies perpendicular to the end of the distal centriole and is attached to it by fibro-granular material. Pro-acrosomal vesicles migrate anteriorly through the cytoplasm and move into the anterior filament to one side of the expanding nucleus. Eventually these vesicles migrate all the way to the tip of the sperm, where they fuse to form one of two granules in the acrosome. In mature sperm the nucleus is bullet-shaped with a long anterior filament and contains dense chromatin with occasional lacunae. The mitochondria vary in both number and position in the mature sperm of different species. Both centrioles are housed eccentrically in a posterior indentation of the nucleus, where the membranes are modified. The elongate flagellum tapers to a long filamentous end-piece that roughly corresponds to the anterior filament and may be important in sperm locomotion for hydrodynamic reasons. An acrosome is present in all ten species and stained positively for acid phosphatase in three species that were tested.  相似文献   

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