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1.
D. Ó Foighil 《Zoomorphology》1985,105(2):125-132
Summary Lasaea subviridis and Mysella tumida sperm resemble the primitive spermatozoan type, but exhibit several unique morphological features. L. subviridis sperm heads vary in shape and size owing to differing degrees of nuclear condensation. A fully mature, heterogenous acrosomal vesicle with an associated axial rod is present. Up to 50% of L. subviridis sperm in developing gonads have conspicuously angled flagella that propel the sperm cells in irregular helical paths. This may represent a penultimate stage in sperm development because the remainder of the sperm cells have posteriorly-directed flagella and swim in a nonhelical anterior direction. A trend toward a reduction in both nuclear condensation and swimming ability may be a long-term consequence of increasing degrees of localized, but non-internal self-fertilization in marine invertebrates that brood. Mysella tumida sperm are monomorphic and possess numerous microvilli (30–60 nm in diameter and up to 5.7 m in length) that resemble stereocilia and radiate from the cell membrane surrounding the basal body. In this species, the sperm cell does not have an axial rod, and the complex acrosomal vesicle contains five distinct zones of varying electron opacity. One of these zones is a transverse, electron-opaque band that is apparently composed of rolled-up membrane. Following acrosomal breakdown, this membrane unfolds to cover the anterior tip of the sperm cell. Although both L. subviridis and M. tumida are hermaphroditic, the relative size of their male investments is conspicuously different. Approximately 40–50% of the M. tumida gonadal volume is testis compared with about 5% of that in L. subviridis.  相似文献   

2.
Summary

A study of sperm penetration of the egg of the house cricket, Acheta domesticus, using a fluorescent microscope technique, showed that sperm penetration of the chorion, prior to fertilization, is not restricted to a specialised area of the egg surface, such as the micropyle. An acrosomal filament is seen on penetrating sperm. Polyspermy (multiple sperm attachment) is seen under normal conditions.

Eggs fertilized in vitro developed to the 4 day (pre-katatrepsis) stage, but did not undergo katatrepsis. Development was confirmed by cytogenetic studies. The percentage of eggs showing cleavage nuclei (i.e. initial development) was 59% after in vitro fertilization and 5% in ovarian eggs incubated in a hypotonic medium.  相似文献   

3.
ABSTRACT

Aspects of the reproductive biology of Argonauta nouryi Lorois, 1852 from the coast of Oaxaca, Mexico, were analysed. A total of 54 specimens with dorsal mantle length (ML) ranging from 6.2 to 41.1?mm were obtained from the stomach contents of five species of large predatory fishes from January 2016 to June 2018. The goals of this study were to collect data on reproductive indicators in order to evaluate the reproductive strategy of A. nouryi in the southeast Mexican Pacific and to use histological analysis to characterise the different ovarian phases based on oogenesis. Immature females (19.6?mm?ML) had sperm in their oviducal glands, indicating that female A. nouryi store sperm long after hectocotyli transmission by males. Potential fecundity was estimated as 31,000–75,026 eggs, with a batch fecundity of 2,000–8,000 eggs. Six distinct developmental stages were observed in the eggs suspended in the A. nouryi shell. Our data indicate that the A. nouryi reproductive strategy includes continuous low batch spawnings, mating early in life, and sperm storage in the spermatheca.  相似文献   

4.
The unfertilized egg of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, has a second meiotic spindle at the animal pole and numerous cortical cytasters. After physiologically polyspermic fertilization, all sperm nuclei incorporated into the egg develop sperm asters, and the cortical cytasters change into bundles of cortical microtubules. The size of the sperm asters in the animal hemisphere is ∼5.6-fold larger than that in the vegetal hemisphere. Only one sperm nucleus moves toward the center of the animal hemisphere to form a zygote nucleus with the egg nucleus. This movement is inhibited by nocodazole, but not by cytochalasin B. The centrosome in the zygote nucleus divides into two parts to form a bipolar spindle for the first cleavage synchronously with the nuclear cycle, but centrosomes of accessory sperm nuclei in the vegetal hemisphere remained to form monopolar interphase asters and subsequently degenerate around the first cleavage stage. The size of sperm asters in monospermically fertilized Xenopus eggs was ∼37-fold larger than those in Cynops eggs. Since sperm asters that formed in polyspermically fertilized Xenopus eggs exclude each other, the formation of a zygote nucleus is inhibited. Cynops sperm nuclei form larger asters in Xenopus eggs, whereas Xenopus sperm nuclei form smaller asters in Cynops eggs compared with those in homologous eggs. Since there was no significant difference in the concentration of monomeric tubulin between those eggs, the size of sperm asters is probably regulated by a component(s) in egg cytoplasm. Smaller asters in physiologically polyspermic newt eggs might be useful for selecting only one sperm nucleus to move toward the egg nucleus. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:210–221, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Cross-fertilization between sea urchin eggs (Strongylocentrotus nudus) and starfish sperm (Asterina pectinifera) was induced by treatment with polyethylene glycol (PEG). Without treatment with PEG, the denuded egg surface (jelly coat- and vitelline coat-free) engulfed the head of acrosome-reacted sperm; however, sperm penetration did not occur [Kyozuka and Osanai, 1988]. When these eggs were exposed briefly to PEG (molecular weight 3,000) in seawater, the sperm entered the egg by membrane fusion. Cortical granules were discharged, and embryogenesis began following sperm penetration. PEG did not induce parthenogenesis in Strongylocentrotus eggs. Egg activation is thus closely linked with gamete membrane fusion.  相似文献   

7.
Unusual chromosome complement in the brooding bivalve Lasaea consanguinea   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Chromosomes of the brooding species Lasaea consanguinea were studied as part of a general invertigation of evolutionary genetics of antarctic bivalve species. Laseid species are of particular interest because they are widely distributed geographically, they inhabit the high intertidal zone, and they may reproduce apomictically.The diploid number of chromosomes for Lasaea consanguinea ranges from 100 to 120, 110 to 112 being most frequent. Karyological data (2n=108) show 6 groups of chromosomes. Group I includes 8 metacentric (m), 3 submetacentric (sm), 2 subtelocentric (st) and 4 telocentric (t) pairs. Group II has 11 t to st pairs; group III, 9 sm to m pairs; group IV, 8 m to sm pairs; group V, 6 st and group VI, 3 m pairs. Within each of the Groups II to VI chromosome pairs are of about the same size and morphology.The chromosomes of Lasaea consanguinea are unusual because of their abundance, their large size and their numerical variability. We suggest that Lasaea consanguinea has had a hermaphroditic ancestor where abnormal reproduction such as inbreeding, lack of males, and apomixy gave rise to genetic instability, the high number of chromosomes being related to the genetic instability with evolutionary polyploidy or/and supernumerary chromosomes.  相似文献   

8.
Sperm proteasomes are thought to be involved in sperm binding to and in sperm penetration through the vitelline coat of the eggs of the stolidobranch ascidian Halocynthia roretzi. However, it is not known whether they are involved in the fertilization of eggs of other ascidians. Therefore, we investigated whether sperm proteasomes are also involved in the fertilization of the eggs of the primitive phlebobranch ascidian Ciona intestinalis. Fertilization of the eggs of C. intestinalis was potently inhibited by the proteasome inhibitors MG115 and MG132 but not by the cysteine protease inhibitor E-64-d. On the other hand, neither fertilization of the vitelline coat-free eggs nor sperm binding to the vitelline coat was inhibited by the two proteasome inhibitors at a concentration sufficient to inhibit fertilization of intact eggs. These results indicate that the proteasome plays an essential role in sperm penetration through the vitelline coat rather than in sperm binding to the coat or in sperm-egg membrane fusion. The proteasome activity, which was detected in the sperm extract using Suc-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-MCA as a substrate, was strongly inhibited by both MG115 and MG132, and was weakly inhibited by chymostatin, whereas neither leupeptin nor E-64-d inhibited the activity. The molecular mass of the enzyme was estimated to be 600-kDa by Superose 12 gel filtration, and the activity in sperm extract was immunoprecipitated with an anti-proteasome antibody. These results indicate that the proteasome present in sperm of C. intestinalis is involved in fertilization, especially in the process of sperm penetration through the vitelline coat, probably functioning as a lysin. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 50:493–498, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
In Xenopus, the plasma membrane of the unactivated egg is receptive to sperm only in the animal hemisphere (R. Grey, M. Bastiani, D. Webb, and E. Schertel, 1982, Dev. Biol.89, 475–487). The reinsemination experiments of investment-free eggs reported in this paper demonstrate that functional sperm entry is lost after activation. Supernumerary sperm were excluded even though the fertilization envelope was absent and the membrane potential had returned to the level found in the unfertilized egg. Even when the electrical block to polyspermy was suppressed by 40 mM NaI (which reduces the membrane potential), polyspermy could be induced only if denuded eggs were initially inseminated in this medium. We estimate that the loss of functional sperm entry, independent of the electrical block, occurs during the first 10 min following fertilization. Sperm readily adhere to the surface of the animal hemisphere of unactivated eggs divested of their extracellular coats, but they do not adhere to the surface of activated eggs. Denuded eggs also adhere to each other, with the surface of the animal hemisphere of unactivated eggs exhibiting the greatest degree of adhesivity. We used electric field-induced fusion (EFIF), without prior dielectrophoresis, to quantify the regional and temporal adhesiveness of eggs. At electric field strengths greater than 8 V/cm, the probability of fusion during EFIF is highest with the animal hemisphere of unactivated eggs, moderate with both the vegetal hemisphere of unactivated eggs and the animal hemisphere of activated eggs, and lowest with the vegetal hemisphere of activated eggs. When pairs of eggs are constructed with different hemispheres in contact, the fusion characteristics of the pair are similar to the more adhesive member of the pair. The regional and temporal differences in the adhesiveness of the Xenopus egg surface correlate with its receptivity to sperm and could possibly account for the plasma membrane's activation-induced loss of functional sperm entry.  相似文献   

10.
The newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, exhibits physiological polyspermic fertilization, in which several sperm enter an egg before egg activation. An intracellular Ca2+ increase occurs as a Ca2+ wave at each sperm entry site in the polyspermic egg. Some Ca2+ waves are preceded by a transient spike-like Ca2+ increase, probably caused by a tryptic protease in the sperm acrosome at the contact of sperm on the egg surface. The following Ca2+ wave was induced by a sperm factor derived from sperm cytoplasm after sperm–egg membrane fusion. The Ca2+ increase in the isolated, cell-free cytoplasm indicates that the endoplasmic reticulum is the major Ca2+ store for the Ca2+ wave. We previously demonstrated that citrate synthase in the sperm cytoplasm is a major sperm factor for egg activation in newt fertilization. In the present study, we found that the activation by the sperm factor as well as by fertilizing sperm was prevented by an inhibitor of citrate synthase, palmitoyl CoA, and that an injection of acetyl-CoA or oxaloacetate caused egg activation, indicating that the citrate synthase activity is necessary for egg activation at fertilization. In the frog, Xenopus laevis, which exhibits monospermic fertilization, we were unable to activate the eggs with either the homologous sperm extract or the Cynops sperm extract, indicating that Xenopus sperm lack the sperm factor for egg activation and that their eggs are insensitive to the newt sperm factor. The mechanism of egg activation in the monospermy of frog eggs is quite different from that in the physiological polyspermy of newt eggs.  相似文献   

11.
Summary

Eggs taken from the genital tracts of Venturia (Nemeritis) canescens (Hym., Ichneum.) and Psychoda cinerea (Dipt., Psychod.) can be activated by brief exposure to distilled water. However, embryogenesis fails soon unless some other conditions are met. These are mechanical deformation of the egg in Venturia, and mating in Psychoda. Development ceases at or soon after meiosis in Psychoda and in most Venturia eggs; the remaining Venturia eggs fail to form an orderly blastoderm although they contain hundreds of nuclei. In Venturia the anomalies are probably due to insufficient activation of some cytoplasmic component(s) while Psychoda eggs fail in the absence of some paternal contribution, possibly the sperm which in this case must enter the oocyte within the follicle.  相似文献   

12.
Synopsis In fish, gamete release is commonly assumed to be synchronous in externally inseminating fishes. By collecting and counting the number of sperm and eggs released during separate matings in three demersal spawners, the mediterranean gobies, Zosterisessor ophiocephalus, Gobius niger, and Knipowitschia panizzae, we observed that gametes are released asynchronously. Males release sperm before females start laying their eggs. Sperm is released in the form of sperm trails laid on the nest surface; subsequently active spermatozoa leave the trails and move in the water for several minutes. Sperm trails consist of bands of viscous material in which sperm is embedded. In most cases eggs are not laid directly over the sperm trail, suggesting that sperm may contact the eggs after the latter are released in the water. Male sperm duct glands, seminal vesicles, known to secrete mucosubstances, are likely involved in the production of sperm trails. The possible influence of this mode of insemination on the mating style of marine gobies is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Summary

In our study of spermiogenesis in the lined chiton Tonicella lineata, we traced the formation and migration of small Golgi vesicles to the apex of the sperm, where they fused to form an apical granule. This apical granule and other Golgi secretions tested positively for acid phosphatase. In preliminary experiments on fertilization, sperm swam inside open hull (chorion) cupules down to the surface of the egg and penetrated it. No micropyle was observed. Serial 1μm sections of eggs fixed during fertilization demonstrated that the sperm nucleus had penetrated not only the hull but also the vitelline and oocyte membranes. Serial thin sections showed that the tip of the anterior filament of the sperm had fused with a single microvillus of the oocyte membrane, creating a membranous tube through which the nucleus had entered the egg cortex. We suggest that the apical granule of chiton sperm is an acrosome that enables the nucleus to penetrate the egg membranes.  相似文献   

14.
The fertilizing capacity was compared between testicular and vas deferens sperm in Cynops pyrrhogaster. The testicular sperm was not capable of fertilizing jelly eggs. In contrast, the vas deferens sperm was already capable of fertilizing the newt jelly eggs. There was no inhibitory factor for fertilizing jelly eggs in the testis. These results suggest that the testicular sperm is immature as to the fertilizing capacity. The testicular sperm gained the fertilizing capacity for the jelly eggs by treatment with Holtfreter's solution or 1/20 strength Holtfreter's solution. The treatment may promote the step of maturation to achieve the fertilizing capacity. The treated testicular sperm did not fertilize dejellied eggs, although vas deferens sperm fertilized dejellied eggs. Therefore, the maturation state of the treated testicular sperm is different from that of vas deferens sperm. Newt sperm may be matured within the vas deferens, as the newt does not have an organ like the mammalian epididymis.  相似文献   

15.
In broadcast spawners, prezygotic reproductive isolation depends on differences in the spatial and temporal patterns of gamete release and gametic incompatibility. Typically, gametic incompatibility is measured in no‐choice crosses, but conspecific sperm precedence (CSP) can prevent hybridization in gametes that are compatible in the absence of sperm competition. Broadcast spawning corals in the Montastraea annularis species complex spawn annually on the same few evenings. Montastraea franksi spawns an average of 110 min before M. annularis, with a minimum gap of approximately 40 min. Gametes are compatible in no‐choice heterospecific assays, but it is unknown whether eggs exhibit choice when in competition. Hybridization depends on either M. franksi eggs remaining unfertilized and in proximity to M. annularis when the latter species spawns or M. franksi sperm remaining in sufficient viable concentrations when M. annularis spawns. We found that the eggs of the early spawning M. franksi demonstrate strong CSP, whereas CSP appears to be lacking for M. annularis eggs. This study provides evidence of diverging gamete affinities between these recently separated species and suggests for the first time that selection may favour CSP in earlier spawning species when conspecific sperm is diluted and aged and is otherwise at a numeric and viability disadvantage with heterospecific sperm.  相似文献   

16.
Evolutionary biologists generally invoke male competition and female choice as mechanisms driving sexual selection. However, in broadcast-spawning organisms sperm may be limiting and females may compete, in the Darwinian sense, for increased mating success. In this study, I investigate how species differences in egg and sperm traits result in different patterns of fertilization among three closely related sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, S. franciscanus, and S. droebachiensis). Field studies demonstrate that all three species achieve similar percentages of eggs fertilized when eggs and sperm are released simultaneously. However, when sperm must disperse before encountering eggs, differences arise among species such that those with the smaller eggs and faster but shorter-lived sperm achieve relatively fewer fertilizations than do species with larger eggs and slower but longer-lived sperm. A field hybridization experiment, field estimates of sperm dispersal, correlations of egg size to field rates of fertilization, laboratory studies of fertilization kinetics, and a simulation model all suggest that it is attributes of the egg (probably egg size) that are responsible for the differences. These patterns of fertilization match the species' patterns of dispersion; species that do well only when sperm and eggs are released in close proximity are more aggregated, species that do relatively well when sperm and eggs are released farther apart are more dispersed. These results are consistent with the notion that eggs of different species are adapted to maximize reproductive success under different degrees of sperm limitation and suggest that male competition and female choice may not be an appropriate dichotomy in broadcast-spawning organisms.  相似文献   

17.
The pattern of sperm predominance in doubly mated female crickets, Gryllodes supplicans, was investigated using a radiation-sterility technique. Female G. supplicans made significant use of sperm from both males in fertilizing eggs; overall, first males to mate enjoyed a small advantage, fertilizing about 60% of the offspring produced subsequent to the second mating. The combined use of the sperm of both males in fertilizing eggs occurred soon after the second mating; evidently, mixing of ejaculates within a female's spermatheca does occur. Male G. supplicans provide females with a nuptial gift, the spermatophylax, which influences the time at which a female removes the externally attached sperm-ampulla; this in turn determines the quantity of sperm that is transferred. Moreover, the degree of sperm precedence achieved by a male may be positively related to the time at which the female removes his sperm ampulla. Thus males, by feeding females, ensure not only that a sufficient number of sperm are transferred to fertilize all of a female's eggs, but also may increase the certainty of their paternity. In mating systems in which females control sperm transfer and paternity is influenced by numbers of sperm (i.e., numerical sperm competition), an increase in prezygotic investment in females may be an adaptive male response.  相似文献   

18.
Pronuclear migration in Fucus distichus spp. edentatus (de la Pyl.) Powell is blocked by incubation of fertilized eggs in colchicine (1 mg/ml) and Nocodazole (2 μg/ ml). Rhizoids form prior to decondensation of the sperm chromatin in eggs in which pronuclear fusion is blocked. This occurs during continuous colchicine incubation as well as in eggs recovering from a short treatment with either drug following fertilization. During recovery of the cells, the sperm and egg chromosomes condense, and the sperm chromosomes migrate toward the egg pronucleus. The delay in migration following removal of colchicine is as much as 24 h and is even slower following removal of Nocodazole. The egg chromosomes form a metaphase plate in treated cells while the sperm chromosomes are still distant in the cytoplasm. This suggests that egg centrioles are important in the mitotic division of the zygote, not sperm centrioles. The effect of colchicine treatment on the mitotic plane and cytokinesis is also discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The grass goby Zosterisessor ophiocephalus sperm‐duct gland extract displayed antimicrobial activity against gram‐positive and gram‐negative bacteria. This suggests that sperm‐duct gland mucins might be functional in protecting eggs and possibly parents from pathogens, an activity of great adaptive value for Z. ophiocephalus, which lays eggs in mud nests.  相似文献   

20.
Females of the viviparous cockroach Diploptera punctata store sperm from their first mating, and do not remate until after giving birth to their first batch of young. The irradiated male technique was used to determine the outcome of sperm competition in the second batch of eggs of females mated sequentially to normal and irradiated males. It is estimated that the second male to mate with a female fertilizes approximately two thirds of the eggs in a female's second batch of eggs. Direct evidence for sperm mixing was obtained. Undeveloped eggs (fertilized by irradiated sperm) and developing embryos (fertilized by normal sperm) were found interspersed throughout oothecae that were extruded from females, demonstrating that normal and irradiated sperm were released from the spermathecae at oviposition and that they competed for fertilizations.  相似文献   

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