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1.
The structural features of eggs of Zorotypus caudelli Karny are described in detail. The egg is elliptic with long and short diameters of 0.6 and 0.3 mm respectively, and creamy white. The egg shows a honeycomb pattern on its surface, without any specialized structures for hatching such as an operculum or a hatching line. The fringe formed by a fibrillar substance secreted after the completion of the chorion encircles the lateral surface. The egg layer is composed of an exochorion, an endochorion, and a vitelline envelope. The exochorion and endochorion are electron-dense and homogeneous in structure. The exochorion shows a perforation of numerous branching aeropyles. The exo- and endochorion are connected by numerous small columnar structures derived from the latter. The vitelline envelope is very thin and more electron-dense than the chorion. A pair of micropyles is present at the equator on the dorsal side of the egg. Originating at the micropyle, the micropylar canal runs through the chorion obliquely. The structural features of the eggs of Zoraptera were compared with those of other polyneopteran and paraneopteran orders.  相似文献   

2.
The eggshell ultrastructure of the exophytic riverine dragonfly Onychogomphus forcipatus unguiculatus (Odonata: Gomphidae) is presented using transmission electron microscopy. A homogeneous vitelline envelope is surrounded by a thick, many-layered endochorion and a relatively thick, homogeneous exochorion. The micropylar projection is covered by a jelly-layer. The structure of the shell is intermediate between known endophytic and exophytic eggshells in the order. A possible evolution of jelly-covered exophytic eggs from endophytic riverine ancestors is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Libellula depressa (Odonata, Libellulidae) is an exophytic dragonfly ovidepositing eggs in clutches on the surface of floating plants and algae. The present work investigates, at ultrastructural level, the gradual differentiation of the egg envelopes and the chorionic changes after egg deposition in water. The ovary of the mature female of L. depressa is composed of numerous strings of panoistic ovarioles, where the eggshell formation takes place gradually throughout the activity of the follicle cells. The present data show that the egg envelopes are constituted of a very thick electrondense vitelline envelope, a thin endochorion and an extremely thick exochorion composed of a fibrillar matrix resting on a thin electrondense layer. After deposition in water, L. depressa eggs, initially white and almost transparent, gradually become brown spots in a semitransparent jelly coat, rich of incorporated debris. The jelly coat enveloping the eggs of L. depressa derives exclusively from the exochorion, constituted of a fibrillar matrix, which swell at contact with water. The jelly-like coat performs an adhesive function and presumably a protective role during egg segmentation and ensuing larval hatching.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The thick rigid chorion of the egg of Triatoma secreted by the follicle cells shows two porous layers: an aerial layer in the exochorion, an alveolar one in the endochorion. The anterior part of the eggshell is closed up by an operculum which is heaved up by the hatching larva. The operculum has no alveolar layer. The air enters through the numerous holes of the shell surface into the aerial layer and through the micropyles into the alveolar layer. The egg has no respiratory plastron.The follicle cells produce also a vitelline envelope whose structure shows a rapid condensation at fertilization time. During its development the embryo secretes two layers: serosal and embryonic cuticle.At high humidities, at low temperatures the egg is able to increase its weight during the early stages of embryogenesis, and this increase stops when the serosal cuticle is secreted. In a dry atmosphere the egg loses water but can develop if the temperature is higher than 20°C.The little permeability of the egg is related to the structure of its envelopes. The chorion and the vitelline envelope prevent the water from getting out of the egg. The serosal cuticle seems to be opposed to the penetration of the water into the egg. The role of the embryonic cuticle is probably limited in the transit of water.
Nous remercions Messieurs les Professeurs Maillet et Folliot qui ont mis le microscope R.C.A. à notre disposition, Madame Allo et Mademoiselle Le Gac, technicienne au microscope à balayage J.S.M. S1, pour leur collaboration technique.  相似文献   

5.
6.
A comparative ultrastructural investigation on the eggshell (vitelline and chorionic envelopes) has been carried out in the nymphs of two mayfly species encompassed into the Baetidae, namely Baetis rhodani and Cloeon dipterum. During oocyte differentiation in the meroistic telotrophic ovarioles, gametes are connected to discrete nurse cells by trophic cords. In B. rhodani, each ovariole contains several eggs arranged in sequence, whereas in C. dipterum each contains a single egg. Follicle cells are competent for vitelline and chorionic envelope synthesis. Baetis rhodani is an oviparous species and the chorion is fairly thick, formed by an alveolate endochorion and a fibrillar exochorion delimited by a honey‐comb roof. Cloeon dipterum stands out among Ephemeroptera for being ovoviviparous. In B. rhodani, ovulation starts in the older nymphs with dark wing‐pads, whereas in C. dipterum choriogenesis ends in the imaginal stage. Here the chorion is very thin and laid eggs hatch almost immediately, allowing the larvulae to move out. The maturation of a single egg per ovariole is synchronized with the achievement of the adult stage. The acquisition of ovoviviparity has led to remarkable changes in the ovariole organization along with a simplification of the eggshell structure.  相似文献   

7.
Although the majority of onychophorans are viviparous or ovoviviparous, oviparity has been described in a number of species found exclusively in Australia and New Zealand. Light microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy were used to examine developing eggs and the reproductive tract of the oviparous Planipapillus mundus. Deposited eggs and fully developed eggs dissected from the terminal end of the uteri have an outer thick, slightly opaque chorion, and an inner thin, transparent vitelline membrane. The chorion comprises an outermost extrachorion, sculptured with domes equally spaced over the surface; a middle exochorion, with pores occurring in a pattern of distribution equivalent to that of the domes of the extrachorion above; and an innermost, thick endochorion consisting of a spongelike reticulum of cavities comparable to the respiratory network found in insect eggs. The vitelline membrane lies beneath the chorion, from which it is separated by a fluid‐filled space. The vitelline membrane tightly invests the developing egg. Examination of oocytes in the ovary and developing eggs at various stages of passage through the uterus indicate that the majority of chorion deposition occurs in the midregion of the uterus, where vast networks of endoplasmic reticulum are present in the columnar epithelium. The vitelline membrane, however, is believed to begin its development as a primary egg membrane, surrounding the developing oocytes in the ovary. The vitelline membrane is transformed after fertilization, presumably by secretions from the anterior region of the uterus; hence, it should be more accurately referred to as a fertilization membrane. Aspects of the reproductive biology of P. mundus are also included. J. Morphol., 2008. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
Summary This communication presents results of studies on the formation and structure of the vitelline envelopes in three species of mites: Euryparasitus emarginatus (Gamasida), Erythraeus phalangoides (Actinedida), and Hafenrefferia gilvipes (Oribatida). In E. emarginatus and E. phalangoides, in which the oocytes are not covered with follicular cells, the material of the vitelline envelope appears first in vesicles under the surface of the oocytes prior to secretion by exocytosis. The formed vitelline envelope is built of a homogeneous material which is perforated by numerous channels containing oocyte microvilli. Later, as the microvilli are retracted, the channels disappear. In both of these species the formed vitelline envelope is incomplete and the micropylar orifice occurs as a transitional structure.In H. gilvipes follicular cells encircling the oocyte contain granules filled with material that is subsequently secreted into the perivitelline space forming the vitelline envelope on the oocyte surface. The inner layer of the vitelline envelope is granular, whereas the outer part is more homogeneous. Both lack channels containing microvilli and micropyle.  相似文献   

9.
By means of electron microscopy two types of egg envelope have been described in representatives of two diplopod subclasses, the Chilognatha and the Pselaphognatha. The vitelline envelope appears on the oocyte surface in early previtellogenesis and persists till ovulation. In its thin and filamentous structure it resembles basement membranes. During vitellogenesis electron dense material is deposited on filamentous scaffolding which fills the space between the oolemma and the vitelline envelope. As a result, the thick and spongy or filamentous chorion is formed. In the present study it has been shown that regardless of the type of oogenesis (solitary-the Chilognatha, or follicular-the Pselaphognatha) both envelopes in diplopods are produced by the oocyte itself, and although completely different in structure and time of appearance, they must be both considered as primary.  相似文献   

10.
This study deals with the formation of vitelline envelope (VE) and chorion compartments in several free living and parasitic acaridid mites.In all investigated mites, the VE is of primary origin (produced by oocyte itself), whereas exochorion material is of tertiary origin (oviduct or chorion gland secretion).In acarid mites Acarus siro and Tyrophagus perniciosus, VE formation starts with the oviductal oocytes in which vitellogenesis already proceeds. It is characterized by stratification (Acarus) or coarse fibrillar texture (Tyrophagus). Oocyte microvilli penetrating VE material were not observed. When the vitellogenesis terminates, VE becomes homogeneous and is transformed into chorion. This is the only layer protecting the deposited egg in A. siro, whereas in T. perniciosus the chorion-coated eggs passing through the distal portion of the oviduct are additionally covered by exochorion material deposited in three distinct forms: dense patches, granules, and most conspicuous locular chambers. In Tyrophagus longior, the egg surface closely resembles that of T. perniciosus, but the locular chambers are smaller. In Aleuroglyphus ovatus the exochorion material forms tiny spherical patches instead of locular chambers.In Sarcoptes scabiei, Notoedres cati and Falculifer rostratus, flocculent VE appears on vitellogenic oocytes in the oviduct. VE development is characterized by formation of numerous lenticular perivitelline spaces, which initially grow to disappear later. Then VE material transforms into fully homogeneous chorion. Chorion glands in Sarcoptes and Notoedres produce multivesicular secretory bodies; their content is released onto the egg surface to form a vesicular monolayer (exochorion) during the egg passage. The chorion gland in Falculifer is composed of two secretory cell types. Its secretion possibly glues the eggs to the host feather barb during highly ordered deposition, and forms the appendage ending with a ribbed plate, here considered to be a print of female undulate lamina acting as an ovipositor. The hatching suture is present. Neither distinct micropyle nor aeropyles have been found in eggs of species under study.The exochorion is proposed to be an adhesive layer which fixes the eggs to the substratum. The same role plays the chorion gland secretion in F. rostratus. It can be argued, however, that locular chambers of Tyrophagus exochorion may participate in reduction of water loss rather than in egg adherence or plastron respiration, as previously suggested in the literature.  相似文献   

11.
E Heller  M A Raftery 《Biochemistry》1976,15(6):1194-1198
The egg vitelline envelope of the marine invertebrate Megathura crenulata is a glycoprotein composed of 37.3 mol % protein and 62.7 mol % carbohydrate. Of the total amino acid content, 61 mol % consists of a single amino acid, threonine. The carbohydrate content includes galactosamine, galactose, and fucose. The molar ratio of threonine to galactosamine is about 1:1. Most of the threonine residues are linked to galactosamine residues via O-glycosidic bonds. A single peptide that was purified following alkaline borohydride treatment of the vitelline envelope had the structure: Abu-Pro-Abu-(Abu6, Pro1, Thr1), where Abu is 2-aminobutyric acid. Several sugar residues have been isolated following the alkaline hydrolysis of the vitelline envelope that include an octasaccharide Gal4Fu4, an hexasaccharide Gal3Fu3, a trisaccharide Gal3, fucose, and galactose. It is proposed that the vitelline envelope of Megathura crenulata eggs is composed of polypeptide chains built to a large extent of closely spaced threonine residues. Almost every threonine residue is linked to a saccharide moiety.  相似文献   

12.
E Heller  M A Raftery 《Biochemistry》1976,15(6):1199-1203
The egg vitelline envelope of the marine invertebrate, Megathura crenulata, was lyzed either by sperm lysins A, B, C or by dithiothreitol. In each case the lysis mixture consisted of two major fractions, I and II, that could be separated by hydroxylapatite chromatography and had different electrophoretic mobilities on cellulose acetate strips. The amino acid, amino sugar, and neutral sugar compositions of fractions I and II were similar and resembled that of the intact vitelline envelope. Fractions I and II of each lysis mixture emerged in the exclusion volume of a Sepharose 6B column. A vitelline envelope fragment enzymatically formed by lysin was further degraded by dithiothreitol to form smaller fragments. A model of the vitelline envelope of the Megathura crenulata egg is suggested whereby the envelope is composed of polypeptide chains cross-linked by disulfide bonds and built to a large extent of closely spaced threonine residues. Most of the threonine residues are linked to carbohydrate units. Dithiothreitol dissolves the envelope by reducing disulfide bonds, whereas lysins most likely dissolve the envelope by degrading polypeptide chains.  相似文献   

13.
The chronology of the development of the egg chorion of Listronotus oregonensis (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) was studied using transmission and scanning electronic microscopy. The exochorion is uniformly covered with tubercles that reduce surface contact with plant sap. These structures could also function as a physical gill. The endochorion is thin and the vitelline membrane, at first granular, changed after oviposition to a lamellar structure. The serosal cuticle continued development until about 72 hr after oviposition, at which time it comprised 90 layers.  相似文献   

14.
The architecture and transformation of the vitelline envelope of the developing oocyte into the chorion of the mature egg of Fundulus heteroclitus have been examined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The mature vitelline envelope is structurally complex and consists of about nine strata. The envelope is penetrated by pore canals that contain microvilli arising from the oocyte and macrovilli from follicle cells. During the envelope's transformation into the chorion, the pore canals are lost and the envelope becomes more fibrous and compact and its stratified nature less apparent. The micropyle, of pore, through which the sperm gains access to the enclosed egg is located at the bottom of a small funnel-shaped depression in the envelope. Internally, the micropyle opens on the apex of a cone-like elevation of the chorion. During the development of the envelope, structured chorionic fibrils, the components of which are presumed to be synthesized by the follicle cells, become attached to its surface. These chorionic fibrils are though to aid in the attachment of the egg to the substratum and perhaps to help prevent water loss during low tides when the egg may be exposed.  相似文献   

15.
An amphibian egg recovered from the body cavity is enclosed by a coelomic egg envelope. Upon transport down the oviduct, the envelope is converted to the vitelline envelope. The coelomic and vitelline envelopes are distinct in terms of sperm penetrability, ultrastructural morphology, and radioiodination profiles. In this study, the macromolecular compositions of these two envelopes were determined. Isolated envelopes were compared by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, peptide mapping, and radiolabeling. A protein with a molecular weight of 57,000 (57K) was present in the vitelline envelope but was absent in the coelomic envelope. A glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 43K in the coelomic envelope was converted to a component with a molecular weight of 41K in the vitelline envelope. The 43K-molecular weight component of the coelomic envelopes could be radioiodinated by lactoperoxidase but no labeling of the 41K-molecular weight component occurred in the vitelline envelope. Peptide mapping using limited proteolysis established that the 43K-molecular weight component of the coelomic envelope was a precursor to the 41K-molecular weight component of the vitelline envelope. These molecular alterations may underlie the ultrastructural and physiological changes occurring in these envelopes.  相似文献   

16.
An investigation of some changes associated with the transformation of the vitelline envelope into the fertilization envelope in the egg of the toad Bufo arenarum is reported here. In most of the experiments described, the parameter used to demonstrate these changes was the stability of structural integrity of isolated envelopes when submitted to different agents and conditions. The envelopes used for this purpose exhibited a high degree of purity and remained apparently unaltered by the isolation procedure. As a quantitative method to ascertain their solubility rate, the release of uv-absorbing materials into solution was determined. Compared to the vitelline envelope, the fertilization envelope has proven to be less soluble in water, more stable in the presence of the chaotropic ion thiocyanate, and less susceptible to digestion in the presence of sperm lysin, trypsin, and pronase. In Bufo arenarum, as in other species, the vitelline envelope appears to be composed of glycoproteins. In contrast to previous results, however, disulfide bonds do not seem to be involved in their structural integrity. Thus, experiments carried out with isolated envelopes as well as with envelopes in situ have demonstrated a lack of effect of disulfide bond breaking agents on envelope stability. Evidence is presented suggesting that the solubility of envelopes in mercaptan solutions, as reported by other laboratories, is likely to be the expression of artifactual results.  相似文献   

17.
During activation of amphibian eggs, cortical granule exocytosis causes elaborate ultrastructural changes in the vitelline envelope. These changes involve modifications in the structure of the vitelline envelope and formation of a fertilization envelope (FE) that can no longer be penetrated by sperm. In Bufo arenarum, as the egg traverses the oviduct, the vitelline envelope is altered by a trypsin-like protease secreted by the oviduct, which induces an increased susceptibility of the vitelline envelope to sperm lysins. Full-grown oocytes of B. arenarum, matured in vitro by progesterone, are polyspermic, although cortical granule exocytosis seems to occur within a normal chronological sequence. These oocytes can be fertilized with or without trypsin treatment, suggesting that the vitelline envelope is totally sperm-permeable. Vitelline envelopes without trypsin treatment cannot retain either gp90 or gp96. This suggests that these glycoproteins are involved in the block to polyspermy and that trypsin treatment of matured in vitro oocytes before insemination is necessary to enable vitelline envelopes to block polyspermy. The loss of the binding capacity in vitelline envelopes isolated from B. arenarum oocytes matured in vitro with trypsin treatment and activated by electric shock suggests that previous trypsin treatment is a necessary step for sperm block to occur. When in vitro matured oocytes were incubated with the product of cortical granules obtained from in vitro matured oocytes (vCGP), vitelline envelopes with trypsin treatment were able to block sperm entry. These oocytes exhibited the characteristic signs of activation. These results support the idea that B. arenarum oocytes can be activated by external stimuli and suggest the presence of unknown oocyte surface receptors linked to the activation machinery in response to fertilization. Electrophoretic profiles obtained by SDS-PAGE of solubilized vitelline envelopes from oocytes matured in vitro revealed the conversion of gp40 (in vitro matured oocytes, without trypsin treatment) to gp38 (ascribable to trypsin activity or cortical granule product activity, CGP) and the conversion of gp70 to gp68 (ascribable to trypsin activity plus CGP activity). Taking into account that only the vitelline envelopes of in vitro matured oocytes with trypsin treatment and activated can block sperm entry, we may suggest that the conversion of gp70 to gp68 is related to the changes associated with sperm binding.  相似文献   

18.
The acrosome reaction of newt sperm is induced at the surface of egg jelly and the acrosome-reacted sperm acquire the ability to bind to the vitelline envelope. However, because the substance that induces the acrosome reaction has not been identified, the mechanism by which the acrosome-reacted sperm bind to the vitelline envelope remains unclear. We found here that a Dolichos biforus agglutinin (DBA) specifically mimicked the acrosome reaction immediately upon its addition in the presence of milimolar level Ca(2+). Fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled DBA bound specifically to the acrosomal cap of the intact sperm in the presence of a Ca(2+)-chelating agent, EDTA, suggesting that binding of DBA to the native receptor for the egg jelly substance on the acrosomal region took the place of the egg jelly substance-induced acrosome reaction. In contrast, the sperm that had been acrosome reacted by DBA treatment did not bind to the vitelline envelope of the egg whose jelly layers were removed. Subsequent addition of jelly extract caused the sperm binding to vitelline envelope, indicating that the egg jelly of the newt contains substances that are involved in not only inducing the acrosome reaction but also binding to the vitelline envelope. This is the first demonstration of the involvement of egg jelly substance in the binding of acrosome-reacted sperm to the vitelline envelope.  相似文献   

19.
We aimed to describe the development and ultrastructure of the thickened serosa and serosal cuticle formed beneath the embryo of Plecoptera, using Scopura montana of Scopuridae as a euholognathan representative. Using transmission electron microscopy, we found that the egg membranes were composed of a thick exochorion, a thicker endochorion consisting of two sublayers, and an extremely thin vitelline membrane. The egg membrane construction represents a groundplan feature of the euholognathan egg membranes. The serosa converges beneath the embryo to form a thickened serosa, comprising cells in a radial arrangement, in association with the formation of the amnioserosal fold. The thickened serosa then deposits the thickened serosal cuticle, consisting of four layers differing in fine structure and electron density. After achieving its secretory function, the thickened serosa then disintegrates, and the liberated serosal cells float for a short period in the peripheral region of the egg inside. Collectively, our findings should provide the basis for further characterization of the serosal structures concerned, but we were unable to corroborate previous studies assigning the thickened serosa and serosal cuticle in Plecoptera to the water absorption function.  相似文献   

20.
The egg capsule of Isohypsibius granulifer granulifer Thulin 1928 (Eutardigrada: Hypsibiidae) is composed of two shells: the thin vitelline envelope and the multilayered chorion. The process of the formation of the egg shell begins in middle vitellogenesis. The I. g. granulifer vitelline envelope is of the primary type (secreted by the oocyte), but the chorion should be regarded as a mixed type: primary (secreted by the oocyte), and secondary (produced by the cells of gonad wall). During early choriogenesis, the parts of the chorion are produced and then connected into a permanent layer. The completely developed chorion consists of three layers: (1) the inner, medium electron dense layer; (2) the middle labyrinthine layer; (3) the outer, medium electron dense layer. After the formation of the chorion, a vitelline envelope is secreted by the oocyte.  相似文献   

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