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1.
Summary

Eupyrene and apyrene spermatozoa are contained in separate cysts in the testis of the butterfly Atrophaneura alcinous. Spermatozoa of both types from various parts of the male reproductive tract were examined with particular reference to their morphological characteristics. All spermatozoa collected from the vas deferens and the vesicula seminalis were found to be immotile under a dissecting microscope. No spermatozoa of either type were recognized in any part of the ejaculatory duct. Within the testis, eupyrene spermatozoa are present in bundles and each spermatozoon has a slender nucleus with an acrosome and a long flagellum containing mitochondrial derivatives. Two kinds of appendages, lacinate and reticular, are present on the surface of the sperm membrane. They are replaced with an extracellular sheath during passage through the vas deferens. In contrast, apyrene spermatozoa have neither nucleus nor acrosome, whereas a cup-shaped structure was found at the sperm tip instead of the acrosome. Unlike eupyrene spermatozoa, they are surrounded by a concentric sheath outside the sperm membrane in the vas deferens. Individual apyrene spermatozoa and coiled bundles of eupyrene spermatozoa were both found to accumulate in the vesicula seminalis before mating. These morphological changes during passage through the male reproductive tract suggests the occurrence of a kind of maturation and capacitation process reminiscent of mammalian spermatozoa.  相似文献   

2.
When swallowtail butterflies, Papilio xuthus, are mated by the hand-pairing method, both types of sperm, eupyrene and apyrene sperm, are transferred from the male to the spermatheca via the spermatophore in the bursa copulatrix. This mechanism is demonstrated by two different kinds of experiments. The first set of experiments employed interrupted copulation, and the second set was examination of the sperm in the spermatophore and spermatheca after the termination of copulation. The sperm was transferred 30 min after the start of copulation. The eupyrene sperm was still in the bundle; the number of the bundles ranged from 9 to 108 (mean, 42.7; n = 27). The bundles were gradually released after the completion of copulation, and the free eupyrene spermatozoa then remained in the spermatophore at least 2 h before migrating to the spermatheca. On the other hand, about 160 000 apyrene spermatozoa were transferred to the spermatophore and remained there for more than 1 h. We observed 11 000 apyrene spermatozoa in the spermatheca 12 h after the completion of copulation, but most of this type of sperm disappeared shortly thereafter. In contrast, the eupyrene sperm arrived in the spermatheca more than 1 day after the completion of copulation and remained there at least 1 week. Therefore, these findings suggest that apyrene sperm migrate from the spermatophore to the spermatheca earlier than eupyrene sperm. Accordingly, if females mated multiply, the time difference might avoid the mixing of sperm. In addition, the predominance of sperm from the last mating session may occur not in the bursa copulatrix but in the spermatheca. Received: January 7, 2000 / Accepted: May 24, 2000  相似文献   

3.
Lepidopteran males produce two sperm types: nucleated eupyrene sperm and non‐nucleated apyrene sperm. Although apyrene sperm are infertile, both sperm types migrate from the spermatophore to the spermathecal after copulation. As a dominant adaptive explanation for migration of apyrene sperm in polyandrous species, the cheap filler hypothesis suggests that the presence of a large number of motile apyrene sperm in the spermatheca reduces female receptivity to re‐mating. However, apyrene sperm are also produced in males of the monandrous swallowtail butterfly Byasa alcinous Klug. To identify the role of apyrene sperm in these males, the present study examines the number of spermatozoa produced and transferred and the dynamics and motility of spermatozoa in the spermatheca for each type of sperm. Apyrene sperm represents approximatey 89% of the sperm produced and transferred, which is comparable to polyandrous species. Two‐day‐old males transfer approximately 17 000 eupyrene and 230 000 apyrene spermatozoa to a spermatophore; approximately 5000 eupyrene and 47 000 apyrene spermatozoa arrive at the spermatheca. Eight days after copulation, most eupyrene spermatozoa remain in the spermatheca and a quarter of them are still active. However, the number of apyrene spermatozoa decreases and those remaining lose their motility after the arriving at the spermatheca. Consequently, 8 days after copulation, no motile apyrene sperm are found. The high proportion of apyrene sperm in the spermatophore, as well as in sperm migration, suggests that the production and migration of apyrene sperm is not simply an evolutionary vestigial trait. The possible functions of apyrene sperm in monandrous species are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Abdominal injection of 1 μg aqueous 20-hydroxyecdysone into Anagasta kuehniella, anytime prior to the initiation of sperm release from the testes, prevents the impending release of eupyrene sperm bundles. Apyrene sperm release is not prevented and there is complete recovery of eupyrene release by the following cycle 24 hr later. If 20-hydroxyecdysone is administered on consecutive days, no eupyrene bundles are released and although apryene sperm release continues, it diminishes with time. The effect of 20-hydroxyecdysone in preventing eupyrene release is dose dependent. Administration of decreasing 20-hydroxyecdysone dosages results in increasing numbers of eupyrene bundles released. When a single injection of 20-hydroxyecdysone is administered to isolated abdomens, recovery time of eupyrene sperm release is slower than in whole moths and total recovery is not seen even by 5 days after administration. Apyrene sperm release is also affected to a greater extent than in whole moths, and in some cases, no apyrene release was detected at all. Treatment with 20-hydroxyecdysone prevents cupyrene bundles from passing through the testicular basilar membrane into the vasa efferentia, thus causing a build up of bundles near the basilar membrane but no disintegration of these eupyrene sperm bundles.  相似文献   

5.
《Journal of Asia》2022,25(2):101916
There are two sperm morphs of silkworm, the nucleated spermatozoa (eupyrene) and anucleated spermatozoa (apyrene). Eupyrene sperm cannot complete fertilization successfully without the apyrene sperm. Here a modified rapid and efficient method for sperm identification was developed, after 10 s of fixation in paraformaldehyde and 30 s of 4′6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) or propidium Iodide (PI) staining, the sperm bundles can be detected easily using a fluorescence microscope. Sperm maturation process of silkworm from the fifth instar larvae to the adult was described with the above method, the precise time of earliest elongate apyrene bundles was detected on day 2 of pre-pupation, with a ratio of 5% in total sperm bundles, after which the percentage of apyrene sperm bundles increased rapidly and attained a relatively stable ratio of 75% at the end of pupation and nearly 80% after eclosion. Delayed mating leads to apyrene sperm accumulation and damaged fertilization. Previous study showed that ecdysone can increase the frequency of apyrene sperm bundles in vitro. Here 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) was injected into hemolymph of the 2-d-old fifth instar larvae, the worms entered into mounting period after three days injection, but no apyrene sperm bundles were induced unless day 2 of pre-pupation. Interestingly, maturation of eupyrene sperm bundles were accelerated, and the ratio of eupyrene sperm bundles increased and exhibited a dose-dependent effect after 20E injection, which indicated that the development of eupyrene sperm can be accelerated by ecdysone before pupation of silkworm in vivo. These results will provide new clues for lepidopteran pest control.  相似文献   

6.
Lepidopteran males produce eupyrene (nucleate) and apyrene (anucleate) spermatozoa, but in the female only eupyrene spermatozoa leave the spermatheca and fertilize the eggs. Both kinds of spermatozoa lack intrinsic motility in the male genital duct. They become motile in the spermatophore, in a process involving proteases from the male duct. In vitro, trypsin induces immotile spermatozoa to become motile. We studied the changes spermatozoa of Manduca sexta undergo during trypsin-induced motility and found that (a) they mimick rather closely those occurring in vivo during normal sperm maturation in genital ducts and (b) they are time- and dose-dependent. As in vivo, they comprise, successively, (a) disappearance of an extracellular matrix that maintains the integrity of eupyrene bundles in the seminal vesicle, (b) dispersion of the eupyrene bundles and intermingling of eupyrene and apyrene spermatozoa and (c) "hatching" of eupyrene spermatozoa from individual enclosing envelopes that are formed in the seminal vesicle. "Hatching" may not directly be related to motility since eupyrene spermatozoa become motile before "hatching" and motile apyrene spermatozoa never "hatch". Rather "hatching" may be related to the capacitation of eupyrene spermatozoa to either leave the spermatheca or fertilize the eggs, or both, as neither apyrene spermatozoa, nor those eupyrene spermatozoa that fail to "hatch", leave the spermatheca.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract. Mating behaviour, sperm transfer and sperm precedence were studied in the moth Spodoptera litura (Fabr.) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae). There existed a rhythmic, diel pattern of mating behaviour of this moth during the scotophase, presumably set with respect to an endogenous activity rhythm. Approximately 30 min after copulation had started, the formation of the corpus of the spermatophore began in the bursa copulatrix of the female moth, but full inflation of the corpus was not completed until 45–60 min after mating had started. The mature spermatophore contained about 350 eupyrene sperm bundles and a large number of individual (loose) apyrene spermatozoa. The mating status and the age of the male insect influenced the number of sperm transferred to the female within the spermatophore, and also affected the consequent fertility. There was no evidence of sperm reflux within the male tract. Within the female, dissociation of eupyrene sperm bundles was evident within the spermatophore less than 15 min after the completion of mating. Spermatozoa began to move from the bursa (in which the spermatophore is lodged) into the spermatheca 30–45 min after the end of the copulation, and the quantity of sperm in the spermatheca reached a plateau at 90 min after mating. Apyrene sperm reached the spermatheca first, followed by eupyrene sperm. Examination of total (apyrene plus eupyrene) sperm in the female tract showed that 86% of mated females received an apparently normal amount of total sperm from the male. Examination of eupyrene sperm alone showed that 81% of matings resulted in an apparently normal transfer of eupyrene sperm. A small proportion (approximately 8%) of the matings, however, were identified as transferring a clearly subnormal quantity of eupyrene sperm to the spermatheca. The eggs produced as a result of such pairings displayed much reduced fertility (about 43%) compared to those from matings confirmed to have transferred normal quantities of sperm, which showed about 92% fertility. This shows that the availability of eupyrene sperm in the spermatheca may be an important constraint on fertility in normal populations of insects. In the laboratory, S. litura females exhibited multiple matings. Of the females, 93% mated, and the mean frequency of mating was 1.69. Mating with a fertile male led to the oviposition of an increased number of eggs. This effect continued even when the female subsequently mated with an infertile male. Displacement of sperm from previous matings is known to be an important factor in the evolution of multiple mating strategies. Our results on sperm utilization by S. litura indicated that after a second mating, the sperm utilized for subsequent fertilization were almost exclusively from the last mating with little mixing. The proportion of eggs fertilized by sperm from the second mating (P2) was calculated as 0.95, indicating almost complete sperm precedence from the last mating.  相似文献   

8.
Bombyx spermatogonia are bipotential, producing nucleate eupyrene sperm and anucleate apyrene sperm. An in vitro cultivation of spermatocysts of Bombyx mori from spermatocytes to matured sperm was established. The present experiment made clear that: (i) spermatocysts must be isolated; (ii) constant shaking at 45 r.p.m. was necessary; and (iii) the addition of Bombyx hemolymph (BH) was indispensable for successful cultivation. In the absence of BH, spermatogenesis proceeded normally for 2 or 3 days and, thereafter, spermatocytes and sperm bundles began to degenerate. The best results for normal eupyrene spermatogenesis were obtained when culture medium containing BH of the corresponding stage was used in every exchange of the medium at 72 h intervals. None or only a small number of apyrene sperm bundles was produced by this culture system when spermatocysts from larval testes were used, although eupyrene spermatogenesis proceeded normally to form matured, or squeezed, sperm bundles.  相似文献   

9.
Silkworm (Lepidoptera) males produce dimorphic sperm, nucleate eupyrene sperm, and anucleate apyrene sperm. The eupyrene sperm is the ordinary sperm fertilizing eggs, while the function of the apyrene sperm, which are about four times as numerous as the eupyrene sperm, is still uncertain. We found the peristaltic phenomenon at the very late stage of spermatogenesis. Peristalsis occurs in both eupyrene and apyrene sperm bundles. Through peristaltic action, cytoplasm of the eupyrene sperm and both cytoplasm and nuclei of the apyrene sperm are discarded from the posterior end of the sperm bundles. Peristaltic squeezing seems to be a process to eliminate the irregular nuclei of apyrene sperm while preserving the nuclei of eupyrene sperm.  相似文献   

10.
Two types of sperm are produced in the silkworm, Bombyx mori. Nucleate eupyrene sperm is an ordinary sperm that contributes to fertilization, while anucleate apyrene sperm is considered to play important roles in assisting eupyrene sperm. At the very late stage of spermatogenesis, a phenomenon called "peristaltic squeezing" occurs in both types of sperm, whereby cytoplasm of the eupyrene and nuclei of the apyrene sperm are discarded from the posterior end, forming matured sperm. In this study, rhodamine-phalloidin staining for actin was applied to sperm bundles. Before the start of peristaltic squeezing, actin filament networks are spread on the cyst cells and constrictions by the networks appear in several places of the bundles. Actin particles, which are later recognized as circlets, are localized within the bundles. Squeezing action by the networks occurs from the anterior region and transfers toward the posterior, eliminating cytoplasm together with circlets from the posterior end. It seems that actin filaments contribute to the peristaltic squeezing of the sperm bundles in Bombyx mori.  相似文献   

11.
Sperm production and movement from the fused testes into the male reproductive tract of the common cutworm Spodoptera litura were studied in insects maintained in a 12 h:12 h light dark (LD) regime. Two types of sperm bundles, eupyrene (nucleated) and apyrene (anucleate) were present in the adult testes. Eupyrene bundles constituted about 25% of the total. Descent of spermatozoa from the testes into the upper vas deferens (UVD) first occurred about 24-30 h before adult eclosion. On entering the reproductive tract, eupyrene spermatozoa remained in bundles while apyrene bundles became dissociated before they reached the UVD. Downward movement of both eupyrene and apyrene spermatozoa within the male tract occurred in a daily rhythm. Sperm descent from the testes into the UVD occurred during the early scotophase, followed by their further descent into the seminal vesicle (SV) during the photophase. Spermatozoa remained in the SV for only a short duration, whence sperm quickly passed through the lower vas deferens into the duplex, which acted as the main sperm storage organ until mating was initiated. During mating 80% of sperm left the duplex, but mating did not influence the number of sperm bundles that subsequently descended into the duplex or the rate of their descent. There was no evidence of sperm reflux. Rearing in constant light (LL) and in constant dark (DD) reduced the number of eupyrene sperm present in the testes of adults that emerged in LL and DD compared to controls (LD), although there was no significant effect on the number of apyrene sperm in the testes. The rhythmic pattern of sperm descent was suppressed in both LL and DD regimes, and the number of sperm in the duplex was adversely affected, with a marked impact in LL reared insects. Male longevity, mating behaviour, oviposition and fertility were found to be more severely affected in LL than in DD.  相似文献   

12.
A male swallowtail butterfly, Papilio xuthus, transfers both eupyrene and apyrene sperm during copulation, both of which migrate to the spermatheca via the spermatophore in the bursa copulatrix of the female. Because the spermatheca seems to remain constant in size during the female lifespan, the excess sperm migration may cause the spermatheca to overflow. Approximately 9000 eupyrene and 265 000 apyrene spermatozoa were transferred during a single copulation, and approximately 1000 eupyrene and 1100 apyrene spermatozoa successfully arrived in the spermatheca. The number of both types of spermatozoon decreased in the spermatheca after the onset of oviposition, and no eupyrene spermatozoa were found by 7 days after copulation, partly due to insemination. The spermathecal gland leading from the distal end of the spermatheca was gradually filled by eupyrene spermatozoa. Although the function of the gland remains unclear, the final destination of the sperm is likely to be the gland.  相似文献   

13.
In the oblique-banded leafroller, Choristoneura rosaceana, and the spruce budworm, C. fumiferana, male reproductive performance decreases with consecutive matings. While the onset time of mating did not vary, the time spent mating was longer in mated than in virgin males. Furthermore, a decline observed in the spermatophore mass with successive matings was associated with a concomitant decline in its apyrene and eupyrene spermatozoa content. In the hours following mating, spermatozoa migrate from the spermatophore, located in the bursa copulatrix, to the spermatheca. Regardless of the male's previous mating history, the number of apyrene sperm dropped rapidly in the days following mating whereas the number of eupyrene spermatozoa declined gradually. As the temporal pattern of sperm movement was similar in all treatments, females mated with previously-mated males would suffer from sperm shortage sooner than those mated with virgins. Large C. rosaceana females stored more apyrene spermatozoa in their spermatheca than small ones, irrespective of the time after mating or male mating history, while only large females mated with once-mated males received more apyrene sperm and accessory gland secretions than small ones mated with virgin or twice-mated males. The results obtained in this study are discussed in relation with their potential impact on the reproductive success of both sexes.  相似文献   

14.
Silkworm (Lepidoptera) males produce dimorphic sperm: nucleate eupyrene sperm and anucleate apyrene sperm. The eupyrene sperm are ordinary sperm to fertilise the eggs, while the function of apyrene sperm remains uncertain. After meiosis, 256 sperm cells are enclosed by a layer of cyst cells, forming a sperm bundle. We have previously documented that the nucleus of eupyrene sperm anchors to the head cyst cell, which locates at the anterior apex of the bundle, by an acrosome tubule-basal body assembly. Neither the basal body attachment to the nucleus nor the acrosome is seen in apyrene sperm, and the nuclei remain in the middle region of the bundle. Peristaltic squeezing starts from the anterior of the bundles in both types of sperm, and cytoplasmic debris of the eupyrene sperm, and both the nuclei and debris of apyrene sperm, are eliminated at the final stage of spermatogenesis. Since the irregularity of meiotic division in apyrene sperm is known, we used triploid silkworm males that show irregular meiotic division even in eupyrene spermatocytes and are highly sterile. The irregular nuclei of the triploid are discarded by the peristaltic squeezing just as those of the apyrene sperm. Transmission electron microscopic observations disclose the abnormality in the acrosome tubule and in the connection to the basal body. The peristaltic squeezing of sperm bundles in the silkworm appears to be the final control mechanism to eliminate irregular nuclei before they enter female reproductive organs.  相似文献   

15.
A comparative analysis of the distribution of tubulin types in apyrene and eupyrene sperm of Euptoieta hegesia butterflies was carried out, also verifying the presence of tubulin in lacinate appendages of the eupyrene sperm. Ultrathin sections of LR White embedded spermatids and spermatozoa were labeled for alpha, beta, gamma, alpha-acetylated and alpha-tyrosinated tubulins. Apyrene and eupyrene spermatids show the same antibody recognition pattern for tubulins. All tubulin types were detected in axonemal microtubules. Alpha and gamma tubulins were also detected on the cytoplasmic microtubules. However, for beta and tyrosinated tubulins only scattered labeling was detected on cytoplasmic microtubules and acetylated tubulin was not detected. In apyrene and eupyrene spermatozoa only the axoneme labeling was analyzed since cytoplasmic microtubules no longer exist in these cells. Alpha, beta and tyrosinated tubulins were easily detected on the apyrene and eupyrene axoneme; gamma tubulin was strongly marked on eupyrene axonemes but was scattered on the apyrene ones. Acetylated tubulin appeared with scattered labeling on the axoneme of both sperm types. Our results demonstrate significant differences in tubulin distribution in apyrene and eupyrene axonemal and cytoplasmic microtubules. Extracellular structures, especially the lacinate appendages, were not labeled by antibodies for any tubulin.  相似文献   

16.
Female moths of Bombyx mori were artificially inseminated with cryopreserved semen. The fertility of inseminated females varied from 0% to 76.9% depending on the strain. Addition of fresh semen from triploid males, which are infertile but whose semen includes intact apyrene sperm, greatly improved fecundity of cryopreserved semen from normal males. Frozen apyrene sperm from the triploid donors also improved the fecundity of females, inseminated with cryopreserved normal semen, but less than fresh semen from triploid males. Fertilization success in B. mori requires the presence of both, intact eupyrene and apyrene sperm. Our results show that eupyrene sperm tolerate the cryopreservation process better than apyrene sperm. Hence, we recommend to add apyrene sperm from the triploid donors as helper sperm routinely to cryopreserved semen in artificial insemination. This may advance the application of cryopreservation as a routine technique to maintain silkworm resources. The technique may also be applicable to other moth and butterfly species which, like B. mori, possess eupyrene and apyrene sperm.  相似文献   

17.
We describe a simple and straightforward procedure for the purification and separation of apyrene and eupyrene forms of lepidopteran sperm. The procedure is generally applicable to both butterfly and moth species with results varying according to the relative amounts of sperm produced and size of sperm storage organs. The technique relies upon inherent differences between eupyene sperm bundles and free apyrene sperm morphology. These differences allow for separation of the sperm morphs by repeated “panning” of sperm bundles into the center of a plastic dish. The purified eupyrene sperm bundles can then be removed and apyrene sperm collected from the supernatant by centrifugation. Efficacy of the purification process was confirmed by light microscopy and gel electrophoresis of the resulting fractions. Both one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis identified significant protein differences between the fractions further suggesting that the panning procedure effectively separated eurpyrene from apyrene sperm. The panning procedure should provide a convenient and accessible technique for further studies of sperm biology in lepidopterans.  相似文献   

18.
Summary

The present study was undertaken to describe the morphological and organizational modifications that occur in apyrene and eupyrene spermatozoa along the male adult reproductive tract of the butterfly, Euptoieta hegesia. Testis, vas deferens, vesicula seminalis and ductus ejaculatorius were studied by transmission electron microscopy. In the testis, both sperm types are organized into cysts; apyrene sperm are devoid of extracellular structures while eupyrene ones have lacinate and reticular appendages. In the testis basal region, both sperm pass through an epithelial barrier and lose their cystic envelope. The eupyrene morphological and organizational modifications are more drastic than the apyrene ones. From the vas deferens to the ductus ejaculatorius, apyrene sperm are dispersed in the lumen and acquire several concentric layers that are formed by the folding of their abundant cell membrane. The apyrene distribution observed here suggests that their functions include eupyrene transportation. Eupyrene sperm, however, remain aggregated along the tract. In the vas deferens, they are covered by a filamentous material that develops into a homogeneous matrix surrounding the spermatozoa coat in the vesicula seminalis and the ductus ejaculatorius. Eupyrene sperm undergo complex morphological changes that include the loss of lacinate appendages and the formation of a dense and heterogeneous extracellular coat. The formation of the matrix and the coat in eupyrene extratesticular sperm is related to the loss of lacinate appendages. These changes are in general extracellular and are probably important for sperm maturation.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of repeated matings on sperm numbers in successive ejaculates of the cabbage white butterfly, Pieris rapae, was examined. First ejaculates were larger than successive ones, which did not differ among themselves. Moreover, the cumulative mass of previous spermatophores was not correlated with that of the last mating. The number of eupyrene sperm bundles in the ejaculate did not differ between first and successive matings. Multiplying by 256, a male transfers about 11,000 eupyrene sperm at every mating. First ejaculates contained about 46,000 apyrene sperm, whereas successive ejaculates contained higher numbers. The sperm density increased after the first mating, though the spermatophore mass decreased. The significance of change in sperm quantity with mating number is discussed from the viewpoint of male investment.  相似文献   

20.
Hamada H  Fugo H 《Zoological science》2007,24(12):1251-1258
Like other Lepidoptera, the silkworm (Bombyx mori) has both nucleated eupyrene and anucleated apyrene sperm that are derived from the same spermatocysts. The former type is responsible for egg fertilization, while the function of the latter is still uncertain. Many hypotheses have been presented concerning the role of the apyrene sperm in mating and fertilization, but none is supported by a convincing experimental approach. The aim of the present study was to enhance the production of apyrene sperm in vitro by using different concentrations of fetal bovine serum (FBS), namely 20%, 30% and 40%, in the culture medium used for cultivating the naked spermatocysts isolated from the silkworm testes at 0 hr, 120 hr, and 192 to approximately 360 hr after the fourth molt. Cultivation of 0-hr spermatocysts was not successful. The development of spermatocysts into eupyrene and apyrene sperm bundles was slightly slower in vitro than in vivo. The overall growth percentage of both eupyrene and apyrene bundles was satisfactory when the spermatocysts were cultivated in TC-100 culture medium containing 30% FBS.  相似文献   

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