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1.
The extracellular matrices (ECMs) surrounding the benthic embryos and larvae of the seastar Patiriella exigua and the planktonic embryos of Patiriella regularis were examined by transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Three ECMs surround unhatched embryos: An outer jelly coat, a fertilization envelope, and an inner hyaline layer. The ECMs of P. exigua are modified for supporting benthic development. The dense jelly coat attaches the embryo to the substratum, and the fertilization envelope forms a though protective case. In comparison, P. regularis has a less dense jelly coat and a thinner fertilization envelope. The hyaline layer of both species is comprised of three main regions: An intervillous layer overlying the epithelium, a supporting layer, and a coarse meshwork layer. Unhatched P. exigua have an additional outer amorphous layer that adheres to the fertilization envelope. As a result, the hyaline layer forms a continuous ECM that unites the embryonic surface with the fertilization envelope. Embryos of P. exigua removed from their fertilization envelopes lack the outer amorphous region, have a poorly developed hyaline layer, and do not develop beyond gastrulation. It appears that the substantial hyaline layer of P. exigua and its attachment to the fertilization envelope are essential for early development and that this ECM may function as a gelatinous cushioning layer around the benthic embryos. At hatching, the amorphous layer is discarded with the envelope. In contrast, an amorphous layer is absent from the hyaline layer of P. regularis. The demembranated embryos of this species have an ECM similar to that of controls and develop normally to the larval stage. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
Eggs from the anuran Xenopus laevis are surrounded by a thick jelly coat that is required during fertilization. The jelly coat contains three morphologically distinct layers, designated J1, J2, and J3. We examined the lectin binding properties of the individual jelly coat layers as a step in identifying jelly glycoproteins that may be essential in fertilization. The reactivity of 31 lectins with isolated jelly coat layers was examined with enzyme-linked lectin-assays (ELLAs). Using ELLA we found that most of the lectins tested showed some reactivity to all three jelly layers; however, two lectins showed jelly layer selectivity. The lectin Maackia amurensis (MAA) reacted only with J1 and J2, while the lectin Trichosanthes kirilowii (TKA) reacted only with J2 and J3. Some lectins were localized in the jelly coat using confocal microscopy, which revealed substantial heterogeneity in lectin binding site distribution among and within jelly coat layers. Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound only to the outermost region of J3 and produced a thin, but very intense, band of fluorescence at the J1/J2 interface while the remainder of J2 stained lightly. The lectin MAA produced an intense fluorescence-staining pattern only at the J1/J2 interface. Several lectins were also tested for the ability to inhibit fertilization. WGA, MAA, and concanavalin A significantly inhibited fertilization and WGA was found to block fertilization by preventing sperm from penetrating the jelly. Using Western blotting, we identified high-molecular-weight components in J1 and J2 that may be important in fertilization.  相似文献   

3.
刘伟  战培荣  陈军 《动物学杂志》2013,48(2):241-248
采用扫描电镜和光学解剖镜,对黑龙江水域怀头鲇(Silirus soldatovi)成熟卵膜层次构造和受精卵胚胎发育过程中卵膜形态结构变化进行观察,并比较未脱黏和人工脱黏卵受精卵膜的表面超微结构变化.结果显示,受精卵膜的胶膜表面由一层薄而致密的物质组成,上有微孔构造.未脱黏受精卵膜表面胶膜光滑致密,多孔隙,内有小梁相连,随胚胎发育逐渐膨胀、展开、变薄,破膜期自然脱落.人工脱黏几乎全部脱去鱼卵的胶膜层,从而使卵失去黏性.脱去胶膜层的受精卵膜表面由不规则的颗粒状结构紧密嵌合而成,表面粗糙,胚胎发育过程中颗粒形状变化不大,但颗粒层逐渐变薄而且疏松,直至胚胎破膜而出:胚胎发育后期颗粒层有过早脱落和破洞出现.同时对活体鱼卵进行连续比较观察,讨论了卵膜结构及动态变化与孵化效果的关系.  相似文献   

4.
Distribution of lectin binding sites in Xenopus laevis egg jelly.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Eggs from the anuran Xenopus laevis are surrounded by a thick jelly coat that is required during fertilization. The jelly coat contains three morphologically distinct layers, designated J1, J2, and J3. We examined the lectin binding properties of the individual jelly coat layers as a step in identifying jelly glycoproteins that may be essential in fertilization. The reactivity of 31 lectins with isolated jelly coat layers was examined with enzyme-linked lectin-assays (ELLAs). Using ELLA we found that most of the lectins tested showed some reactivity to all three jelly layers; however, two lectins showed jelly layer selectivity. The lectin Maackia amurensis (MAA) reacted only with J1 and J2, while the lectin Trichosanthes kirilowii (TKA) reacted only with J2 and J3. Some lectins were localized in the jelly coat using confocal microscopy, which revealed substantial heterogeneity in lectin binding site distribution among and within jelly coat layers. Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) bound only to the outermost region of J3 and produced a thin, but very intense, band of fluorescence at the J1/J2 interface while the remainder of J2 stained lightly. The lectin MAA produced an intense fluorescence-staining pattern only at the J1/J2 interface. Several lectins were also tested for the ability to inhibit fertilization. WGA, MAA, and concanavalin A significantly inhibited fertilization and WGA was found to block fertilization by preventing sperm from penetrating the jelly. Using Western blotting, we identified high-molecular-weight components in J1 and J2 that may be important in fertilization.  相似文献   

5.
In this, the first fine structural study of sea cucumber embryology, eggs and embryos of Stichopus tremulus developing at 7.5°C are described from spawning through hatched blastulae. Spawned eggs are at about first meiotic metaphase and are surrounded by a jelly layer that remains around the embryos until hatching. No vitelline coat can be demonstrated, but whether it is truly absent or removed by electron microscopic processing is not known. Insemination initiates a rapid cortical reaction, completed within 2 min., which involves a wave of cortical granule exocytosis and fertilization envelope formation. The compactly fibrous fertilization envelope is about 50 nm thick and appears to consist entirely of ejected cortical granule material (if one assumes that there is no vitelline coat). As the fertilization envelope elevates, no hyaline layer appears in the perivitelline space. The first and second polar bodies are emitted, respectively, at about 9 and 15 min. after insemination. The first seven or so cleavages are equal, radial, and occur approximately every 4 hr. The blastocoel opens up at the four-cell stage and, during the earlier cleavages, remains connected with the perivitelline space via numerous gaps between the roughly spherical blastomeres. At the 64-cell stage, these gaps begin to close as the blastomeres start to become cuboidal; in addition, an embryonic cuticle is produced on the apical surface of each blastomere. In embryos of several hundred cells, the blastomeres become associated apicolaterally by junctional complexes, each consisting of a zonula adherens and a septate junction. Several hours before hatching, a single cilium is produced at the apical surface of most blastomeres. At hatching (about 50 hr after insemination), the ciliated blastula leaves behind the fertilization envelope and jelly layer. Swimming blastulae soon begin to elongate in the animal-vegetal axis, and a basal lamina develops on blastomere surfaces facing the blastocoel. The discussion includes a fine structural comparison of egg coats among the five classes of the phylum Echinodermata.  相似文献   

6.
The morphological distribution of oligosaccharides is determined in the egg jelly surrounding Xenopus laevis eggs. This biological system is used to illustrate a method for readily identifying and quantifying oligosaccharides in specific tissues. The extracellular matrix surrounding X. laevis eggs consists of a vitelline envelope and a jelly coat. The jelly coat contains three morphologically distinct layers designated J1, J2, and J3 from the innermost to the outermost and is composed of 9-11 distinct glycoproteins. Each jelly layer is known to have specific functions in the fertilization of the egg. We developed a rapid method to separate and identify the oligosaccharides from X. laevis egg jelly layers. Identification was based on the retention times in high-performance liquid chromatography (porous graphitized carbon column), exact masses, and tandem mass spectrometry. Over 40 neutral and 30 sulfated oligosaccharides were observed in the three jelly layers. Neutral oligosaccharide structures from different jelly layers were both unique and overlapping, while sulfated oligosaccharides were detected only in layers J1 and J2. Neutral oligosaccharides unique to jelly layer J3 and the combined layers J1+J2 had similar core structures and similar residues. However, differences between these two sets of unique oligosaccharides were also observed and were primarily due to the branching carbohydrate moieties rather than the core structures.  相似文献   

7.
The formation of the fertilization layer in the Xenopus laevis egg fertilization envelope involves a lectin-ligand interaction and establishes a block to polyspermy in the extracellular matrix of the egg. The cortical granule lectin participating in the formation of the fertilization layer has been isolated but its ligand has not. We identified three jelly coat ligands bound by the cortical granule lectin using immunoelectrophoretic analyses. Two antigens were detected with anti-jelly serum and a third was identified using anti-envelope serum. All three antigenic ligands were associated with the innermost jelly coat layer, J1, and two of the three antigenic ligands contained sulfate. One or more of these jelly coat ligands may function in establishing a block to polyspermy at fertilization in Xenopus laevis .  相似文献   

8.
Eggs of the asteroid Pisaster ochraceus demonstrate cortical granules, a thick vitelline membrane, and a poorly stained jelly coat similar to that seen on the eggs of other echinoderms. When fixed in the presence of alcian blue the jelly coat is seen to be made up of three regions, an inner layer consisting of a meshwork of fibres, a middle layer of thicker fibres, and a dense outer layer. At fertilization the cortical granules release their contents into the potential space between the vitelline layers and a low fertilization membrane consisting of the vitelline layer and a dense component of the corticle granule is formed. Initially the remaining contents of the corticle granules form an amorphous hyaline layer that fills the space between the plasma membrane and the fertilization membrane. At hatching a distinct hyaline layer is present. It persists at least to the bipinnaria stage and consists of four distinct layers. A similar layer is also located over much of the early embryonic endoderm but is lost from the regions involved in the formation of the mesenchyme cells, coelom, and mouth just before these events take place. Numerous large clear vesicles are located in the apex of all cells associated with a hyaline layer. Where the hyaline layer is lacking, only scattered vesicles are present suggesting that the vesicles may be involved in maintenance of the layer. Attempts to identify elements of the hyaline layer by immunofluorescence demonstrated that it appears to bind both antisera and control sera in a nonspecific manner.  相似文献   

9.
Extracts of the jelly coat of eggs of several marine invertebrates are known to induce in homologous sperm morphological changes known as the acrosome reaction. When sperm of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus are treated with low concentrations (0.2 μg fucose/ml) of egg jelly coat or 30 mM CaCl2 in artificial seawater the acrosome reaction does not occur. However, either of these treatments causes the exposure of an acrosin-like enzyme to exogenous substrate and inhibitors. Subsequent addition of jelly coat to 3.7 μg fucose/ml to sperm in this “initial stage” induces the acrosome reaction (as judged by the appearance of an acrosomal filament). This concentration is also effective for untreated sperm. If inhibitors of the enzyme (diisopropylphosphofluoridate or phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride) are added to sperm in the initial stage, no acrosomal filaments are observed when the high concentration of jelly coat is added. Whether other morphological changes occur in these sperm has not been examined. If phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride is added 4 sec after the jelly coat, the acrosomal filaments are observed, but the sperm still fail to fertilize eggs. These results suggest a dual role for the acrosin-like enzyme(s), first in the mechanism of the acrosomal filament formation and then in a subsequent event in the fertilization process.  相似文献   

10.
Abalone eggs are surrounded by a complex extracellular coat that contains three distinct elements: the jelly layer, the vitelline envelope, and the egg surface coat. In this study we used light and electron microscopy to describe these three elements in the red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) and ascribe function to each based on their interactions with sperm. The jelly coat is a spongy matrix that lies at the outermost margin of the egg and consists of variably sized fibers. Sperm pass through this layer with their acrosomes intact and then go on to bind to the vitelline envelope. The vitelline envelope is a multilamellar fibrous layer that appears to trigger the acrosome reaction after sperm binding. Next, sperm release lysin from their acrosomal granules, a nonenzymatic protein that dissolves a hole in the vitelline envelope through which the sperm swims. Sperm then contact the egg surface coat, a network of uniformly sized filaments lying directly above the egg plasma membrane. This layer mediates attachment of sperm, via their acrosomal process, to the egg surface. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
We studied the glycopatterns and ultrastructure of the extra-cellular matrix (ECM) of the egg of the Apennine yellow-bellied toad Bombina pachypus, by light and electron microscopy in order to determine structure, chemical composition and function. Histochemical techniques in light microscopy included PAS and Alcian Blue pH 2.5 and 1.0, performed also after β-elimination. Lectin-binding was tested with nine lectins (AAA, ConA, DBA, HPA, LTA, PNA, SBA, UEA-I, WGA). An inner fertilization envelope (FE) and five jelly layers (J1-J5) were observed, differing in histochemical staining, lectin binding and ultrastructure. Most glycans were O-linked, with many glucosamylated and fucosylated residues. The fertilization envelope presented a perivitelline space and a fertilization layer, with mostly neutral glycans. The jelly layers consisted of fibers and granules, whose number and orientation differed between layers. Fibers were densely packed in J(1) and J(4) layers, whereas a looser arrangement was observed in the other layers. Jelly-layer glycans were mostly acidic and particularly abundant in the J(1) and J(4) layers. In the J(1), J(2) and J(5) layers, neutral, N-linked glycans were also observed. Mannosylated and/or glucosylated as well as galactosyl/galactosaminylated residues were more abundant in the outer layers. Many microorganisms were observed in the J(5) layer. We believe that, apart from their functions in the fertilization process, acidic and fucosylated glycans could act as a barrier against pathogen penetration.  相似文献   

12.
Summary The ability of the vitelline and fertilization envelopes of rainbow trout eggs to trap toxins was investigated using cholera enterotoxin B and staphylococcal enterotoxin B in cytochemical or immunocytochemical experiments. Extracts from both envelopes were investigated by immunoblot analysis to identify toxin-binding proteins after SDS-PAGE. Binding studies of cholera enterotoxin B to vitelline envelopes and fertilization envelopes revealed a greater reactive intensity in the former. Treatment with neuraminidase enhanced the reactive intensity (or deposit) in the vitelline envelope and fertilization envelope outermost layers, with more conspicuous reactivity in the former. Cytochemical experiments showed that exogenous ganglioside GM1 considerably enhanced cholera enterotoxin B binding to vitelline and fertilization envelopes. This enhancement was shown by an intense reactivity following the occurrence of new binding sites on the vitelline envelope inner surface and the inner wall of the zona radiata, a simultaneous extreme reduction in the reactivity of the vitelline envelope outermost layer, and a striking increase in reactive products in the fertilization envelope outermost layer. The surface region of the vitelline or fertilization envelope outermost layer was the binding site for staphylococcal enterotoxin B, and neuraminidase treatment caused a considerable reduction of reactive products in these areas. Immunoblot analysis of cholera enterotoxin Bor staphylococcal enterotoxin B-binding substances in extracts from the vitelline envelopes or fertilization envelopes demonstrated that the great majority of the binding substances are glycoproteins. The present results suggest that glycoproteins constituting the vitelline envelope or fertilization envelope may contribute to the protection of the egg itself or the embryo by trapping noxious toxins.  相似文献   

13.
Properties of the Cortical Granule Lectin Isolated from Xenopus Eggs   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0  
The cortical granule lectin that participates in forming the fertilization layer in Xenopus laevis was isolated and partially characterized. About 400 μg of lectin was purified from 5 mg of crude exudate by chromatography on Sepharose 6B and Concanavalin A-conjugated Sepharose 4B columns and electrophoretic separation on polyacrylamide gel. The lectin has a molecular weight of 550 Kd and is composed of two species of polypeptides (46 Kd and 42 Kd). The lectin gave a single precipitin line against material in the prefertilization layer in an agglutination reaction on an agarose plate. The agglutination reaction involved D-galactoside residues and metal ions. The lectin formed an electron-dense layer on the outer surface of the vitelline coat of oviducal eggs covered with the prefertilization layer, but on the outer surface of jelly layer, not on that of the vitelline coat of jellied eggs. Although the jelly could be agglutinated by the lectin, the possibility that the jelly layer is the site of fertilization layer formation was excluded by the fact that the prefertilization layer is the first to meet the cortical granule lectin during normal fertilization.  相似文献   

14.
Xenopus laevis eggs were coated, immediately after squeeze-stripping and fertilization, with a thin layer ( approximately 50 microm) of film based on one of three different types of alginates which varied in their mannuronic/guluronic acid ratio. The alginate was cross-linked with either Ca or Ba ions at three different concentrations. The developmental, survival, and hatching of these embryos and the swelling of their natural jelly coats or hydrocolloid coatings were studied over 7 days, while embryos were maintained in flowing aerated water at a ratio of 85 mL per embryo or at a very diminished ratio of 1.6 mL of sterile or nonsterile MMR solution per embryo. All experiments were conducted in triplicate at 20+/-1 degrees C. Oxygen was monitored continuously. Mineral content was determined in the alginate-jelly coat and within the embryos over time. The coating conferred major advantages when the ratio between the embryos and the surrounding medium was at a minimum under nonsterile conditions, perhaps as a result of the film's resistance to diffusion. In the studied systems, the coating seemed to postpone embryo hatching to a more developed stage. In addition, the coating served as a barrier to microbial contamination and thus improved survival prospects.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Fertilization in the freshwater hydrozoanHydra carnea has been examined by light, scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Sperm penetrate the jelly coat which covers the entire egg surface only at the site of the emission of the polar bodies. The egg surface exhibits a small depression, the so called fertilization pit at this site. Sperm-egg fusion takes place only at the bottom of the fertilization pit.Hydra sperm lack a structurally distinct acrosome and in most of the observed cases, fusion was initiated by contact between the membrane of the lateral part of the sperm head and the egg surfacce. Neither microvilli nor a fertilization cone are formed at the site of gamete fusion. The process of membrane fusion takes only a few seconds and within 1 to 2 min sperm head and midpiece are incorporated in the egg.Electron dense material is released by the egg upon insemination but cortical granule exocytosis does not occur and a fertilization envelope is not formed. The possible polyspermy-preventing mechanisms in hydrozoans are discussed. Hydra eggs can be cut into halves whereupon the egg membranes reseal at the cut edges and the fragments assume a spherical shape. Fragments containing the female pronucleus can be inseminated and exhibit normal cleavage and development. The observation that in such isolated parts the jelly coat will not fuse along the cut edges was used to determine its role in site-specific gamete fusion. These experiments indicate that site-specificity of gamete fusion can be attributed to special membrane properties at the fertilization pit.  相似文献   

16.
The embryonic hatching process in the toad, Bufo japonicus , consists of two phases: rupture of the outer jelly strings at stage 20 (neural tube) and an escape from the inner jelly layers and fertilization coat (FC) of individual embryos at stage 23 (tailbud). SDS-PAGE analyses of FCs revealed that, of the eight major protein bands, two components with 58 K and 62 K in molecular weight gradually decreased from stage 18–19 on and totally disappeared at stage 22. When the FCs were treated with a hatching medium prepared by culturing denuded prehatching embryos, both 58 K and 62 K components of the FCs were solubilized, and in the solubilized materials 18 K and 31 K components appeared. Electron microscopy showed that a meshwork of filament bundles present in the FCs before stage 17 became dissociated at stage 19–20, and completely disappeared at stage 23, just before the hatching of embryos. Hatching gland cells (HGCs), an epidermal cell with numerous secretory granules, were first identified at stage 19, and underwent active secretion of the granules during stage 19–23. These results indicate that the hydrolytic degradation of 58K and 62 K components in FCs effected by the hatching enzyme constitutes the basic mechanism of embryonic hatching during both the first and second phases.  相似文献   

17.
Synopsis Sturgeon gametes differ from those of most fish in that the sperm possess acrosomes that undergo exocytosis and filament formation while the eggs possess numerous micropyles. Acipenser transmontanus eggs are encased by multilayered envelopes that consist of outer adhesive jelly coats and three structured layers interior to the jelly. The glycoprotein jelly layer only becomes adhesive upon exposure to freshwater. The layer interior to the jelly, layer 3, is the other carbohydrate-containing component of the egg envelope. This layer consists of a water-insoluble glycoprotein that, upon freshwater exposure, is hydrolyzed by a trypsinlike protease to yield a water-soluble, lower molecular weight carbohydrate-containing component. This component can be identified in the surrounding medium when unfertilized eggs are incubated in freshwater. This egg water component elicits acrosome reactions only in homologous sperm. The A. transmontanus sperm acrosome reaction is a Ca++ and/or Mg++ dependent event that includes the formation of a 10 μ long fertilization filament. A. transmontanus fertilization can occur at low sperm per egg ratios; however, crossfertilization of A. transmontanus eggs with lake sturgeon, A. fluvescens, sperm results in a very low number of fertilized eggs, even at high sperm per egg ratios. The morphological, physiological, and biochemical phenomenon reviewed in this paper are related to the environment in which they occur. Also, the possible role of the acrosome and the presence of numerous micropyles are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
On the contents of the cortical granules from Xenopus laevis eggs   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The extruded contents of the cortical granules in eggs of Xenopus laevis were solubilized by exposure to divalent metal ion chelators. Chelator extraction of cortical granule (CG) material from intact fertilized or artificially activated eggs was quantitated by fluorescence spectroscopy. The isolated fertilization envelope, formed upon interaction between CG material and the preexisting vitelline envelope, was also subject to extraction. An ultrastructural analysis revealed that chelator exposure resulted in the disruption of the structural integrity of the CG-derived F-component of the fertilization envelope. CG material was isolated from Xenopus ova by three procedures: (1) extrusion from artificially activated, dejellied eggs; (2) extraction of intact, fertilized eggs; and (3) extraction of isolated fertilization envelopes. Only 4–5% of the CG protein recovered by extrusion or by extraction of the intact fertilized egg could be associated with the isolated fertilization envelopes. One predominant polypeptide fraction with an identical relative mobility was demonstrated in all CG preparations upon polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in SDS. Polymeric forms of CG protein were detected in chelator extracted preparations. The presence of an intact jelly coat during CG breakdown was a prerequisite to the transformation of the vitelline envelope to a fertilization envelope with altered physicochemical characteristics. Further, the CG-derived F-component of the fertilization envelope did not appear to play a critical role in determining the physicochemical properties of the fertilization envelope.  相似文献   

19.
Embryos of the frog Lepidobatrachus laevis are encased by a fertilization envelope and two jelly layers, termed J1 (innermost) and J2 (outermost). From preparations of total jelly solubilized from cleavage-stage embryos by a solution of alkaline beta-mercaptoethanol we have purified one jelly coat glycoprotein to homogeneity via FPLC gel permeation chromatography on Superose 6H. The purified glycoprotein was 94% protein and 6% carbohydrate, had an s0(20),w of 11.7 S, with a molecular weight of 245,000 measured by sedimentation equilibrium and 263,000 by gel permeation chromatography. SDS-PAGE revealed that the glycoprotein is composed of a single subunit near 29,700 molecular weight; thus we propose that eight of these subunits comprise the native molecule. Amino acid analysis of the glycoprotein indicated a high content of Glx + Asx (32.4 mole%), a low content of basic amino acids (Arg + Lys = 12.2 mole%), and a single cysteine residue per subunit. The N-terminal amino acid was threonine and the sequence of the first twenty amino acids was determined. Monospecific antisera to the glycoprotein were prepared in rabbits and were used to immunohistochemically localize the glycoprotein throughout the matrix of both jelly layers. Antiserum against the glycoprotein had virtually no effect on the fertilizability of jellied eggs in vitro; thus we hypothesize that the glycoprotein fulfills a structural role in both jelly layers.  相似文献   

20.
An enzyme which hydrolyzes benzoyl arginine ethylester has been demonstrated in sperm of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus using a sensitive assay employing tritiated substrate. Eighty percent of the enzyme is exposed but not solubilized by treatment with either 30 mM CaCl2 or solubilized egg jelly coat. The enzymatic activity is masked in control sperm which have not been treated with these agents. The exposed enzyme is inhibited by diisopropyl phosphofluoridate (DFP), soybean trypsin inhibitor, or phenylmethane sulfonyl fluoride, suggesting that it is a serine protease and the invertebrate counterpart of vertebrate acrosin. Inhibition of the exposed enzyme with DFP prevents subsequent fertilization.  相似文献   

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