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1.
Contrary to the widely accepted view that chiton sperm lack acrosomes and that fertilization in this group occurs via a micropyle, we demonstrate here that fertilization in Tonicella lineata occurs by acrosome-mediated sperm-egg fusion. The acrosome is a small vesicle containing two granules located at the tip of the sperm. The eggs have an elaborate hull (=chorion), which is formed into cupules that remain covered by follicle cells until maturity. When dissected ripe eggs were exposed to sperm in vitro, the sperm were attracted only to open cupules, inside which they swam through one of seven channels to the base where they penetrated the hull. The acrosome fired on contact with, or in, the hull, and during passage through it the apical granule was exhausted while the basal granule was exposed. If sperm contacted follicle cells between the cupules the acrosome did not react. The vitelline layer beneath the hull contains pores arranged in a regular pattern. Embedded in the base of each pore is an egg microvillus. Having penetrated the hull the sperm anterior filament located a pore and fused with the tip of the egg microvillus projecting into it. This created a membranous tube, through which the sperm nucleus was injected into the egg. The egg membrane appeared to be raised up into a small fertilization cone around the penetrating sperm, the vitelline layer became slightly elevated, and some cortical granules were released by exocytosis.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract. Egg hull formation during oogenesis in the chiton Callochiton dentatus does not follow the typical model of merocrine secretion involving Golgi vesicle exocytosis. Instead, microapocrine secretions are primarily responsible for egg hull formation, although merocrine secretions contribute “areolae” and the vitelline layer. Microapocrine secretion mechanisms are poorly understood, involving a different cellular pathway than is typical. Egg hull formation in C. dentatus involves two types of microapocrine secretions released by the oocyte, one of which is described here for the first time. The plesiomorphic jelly-like egg hull of chitons, as exemplified by the eggs of members of the basal order Lepidopleurida and present also in eggs of C. dentatus (Chitonida: Callichitonidae), may have evolved solely as an oocyte secretion, whereas members of some other families in the order Chitonida form their egg hulls with considerable secretory input from the follicle cells as well.  相似文献   

3.
Since the initial discovery of double fertilization in angiosperms in 1898, a number of reports of double fertilization-like events in the genus Ephedra have appeared. Until recently, convincing documentation of double fertilization in Ephedra had not been presented. In Ephedra nevadensis, following entry of a single binucleate sperm cell into the egg cell, one sperm nucleus migrates in a chalazal direction to fuse with the egg nucleus. Contemporaneous with this first fertilization event, the ventral canal nucleus regularly migrates from its initially apical position within the egg cell to a more central position within the egg cytoplasm, where it fuses with a second sperm nucleus. Based on quantitative microspectrofluorometric analysis, occasional supernumerary nuclei within the egg cell (derived by migration through pores in the cell walls between jacket cells and the central cell or egg cell) can be ruled out as participating in the second fertilization event. The evolutionary establishment of double fertilization in Ephedra (or its ancestors) was dependent on a number of specific developmental preconditions: 1) persistence of the ventral canal nucleus (which is degenerate in many groups of nonflowering seed plants) through the time of normal fertilization; 2) regular displacement of the ventral canal nucleus from its initially apical position within the egg cell to a position within the egg cytoplasm where fusion of the egg nucleus with the first sperm nucleus earlier occurred; 3) acquisition of egg-like features by the ventral canal nucleus that allow it to attract and fuse with a sperm nucleus; and 4) consistent entry of a second sperm nucleus into the archegonial cavity to participate in a second fertilization event. Although it cannot be determined definitively whether double fertilization in Ephedra is evolutionarily homologous with double fertilization in flowering plants, comparative evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that double fertilization arose in a common ancestor of the Gnetales and angiosperms.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Histochemical studies and electron microscopic investigations on the role of the follicle cells during oogenesis in the chiton Sypharochiton septentriones showed that the main role of the follicle cells was the deposition of a spiny chorion around each oocyte. The chorion was composed of three layers; an inner, acid mucopolysaccharide layer, which was a primary egg membrane secreted by Golgi bodies in the cortical cytoplasm of the oocyte, an intermediate layer of protein and an outer layer of lipid. The intermediate and outer layers were secreted by the follicle cells and were thus secondary egg membranes.  相似文献   

5.
Free‐spawning species of chitons produce eggs enclosed in a coating known as the hull. In Chitonida, several studies have shown that the hull helps to direct sperm to specific areas of the egg surface, facilitating fertilization. One study has found evidence that this structure also serves to reduce the sinking rates of the eggs. To clarify how the presence of the hull modifies sinking rates in chiton eggs, here we compare sinking speeds and densities of eggs of Mopalia kennerleyi with and without the hull. Sinking rates of eggs with the hull were approximately one‐third of those without it. This structure acts as a flotation device because it has a density very close to that of seawater, and it increases the effective diameter and therefore the drag on the negatively buoyant egg. Since there is limited knowledge about morphology and behavior of chiton larvae, we also analyzed changes during ontogeny in behavior, swimming speeds, and body shape of larvae of M. kennerleyi. Over time, the larvae decreased their upward swimming tendency and preferred to stay near the bottom, and their bodies became elongated and dorso‐ventrally compressed. These changes may be related to preparation for settlement and metamorphosis. Further studies of these subjects are required in chitons, since movement of early stages, as eggs/embryos sinking or larvae swimming in the water column, may affect their survival.  相似文献   

6.
Sea urchin gametes predominate in molecular studies of fertilization, yet relatively little is known of the subcellular aspects of sperm entry in this group. Accordingly, it seemed desirable to make a detailed examination of sperm entry phenomena in sea urchins with the electron microscope. Gametes of the sea urchins Arbacia punctulata and Lytechinus variegatus were used in this study. Samples of eggs containing 2 to 8 per cent oocytes were selected and fixed with osmium tetroxide in sea water at various intervals after insemination. Fixed specimens were embedded in Epon 812, sectioned, and examined with an electron microscope. An apical vesicle was observed at the anterior end of the acrosome. The presence of this structure, together with other observations, suggested that initiation of the acrosome reaction in sea urchin sperm involves dehiscence of the acrosomal region with the subsequent release of the acrosomal granule. Contact and initial fusion of gamete membranes was observed in mature eggs and oocytes and invariably involved the extended acrosomal tubule of the spermatozoon. Only one spermatozoon normally enters the mature egg. The probability of locating such a sperm in ultrathin sections is exceedingly low. Several sperm do normally enter oocytes. Consequently, observations of sperm entry were primarily restricted to the latter. The manner of sperm entry into oocytes did not resemble phagocytosis. Organelles of the spermatozoon were progressively divested of their plasma membrane as they entered the ground cytoplasm of the oocyte fertilization cone. Initiation of the acrosome reaction, contact and initial fusion of gamete membranes, and sperm entry into oocytes of sea urchins conform to the Hydroides-Saccoglossus pattern of early fertilization events as described by Colwin and Colwin (13).  相似文献   

7.
Summary

The process of fertilization and the sperm storage in the female apparatus in Parascaris equorum is described in this paper. The sperm approaches the egg by means of pseudopodia containing bundles of microfilaments. The sperm and egg membranes fuse and the sperm penetrates progressively into the ovum. The egg and sperm plasma membranes and glycocalyces disappear at the point of fusion. At the end of fertilization, they are reformed at the egg's surface, while the egg and sperm chromatin begins to decondense. Spermatozoa are stored in the female apparatus prior to fertilization; here they come into contact with the epithelial cells of the spermatheca, protruding pseudopodia rich in microfilaments into the cellular body.  相似文献   

8.
The details of fertilization in the centric diatom,Melosira moniliformis var.octagona, were examined by light microscopy with a video system. The sperm penetrated into the egg cell through a temporary opening of the oogonium. The flagellum of the sperm was brought into the egg cell and it remained active for a few minutes. Three observations on the behavior of the sperm and egg cell during fertilization are shown.  相似文献   

9.
This paper deals with early embryogenesis of Actinidia chinensis var. chinensis. 1. Ovary superior consists of 34—45 carpels. Each carpel contains 11–45 ovules. The ovule is uni-integument and tenuinucellar. The ovule is anatropous. The archesporium is formed by a single cell, and directly develops into megaspore mother cell. Sometimes the archesporium consists of 2–3 cells, but only one of them develops into megaspore mother cell and the others are degenerated. 2. The mature pollen grain is two-celled and the embryo sac belongs to olygonum type. In most embryo sacs two polar nuclei are fused before fertilization. One of the synergids was destroyed as the pollen tube penetrated into embryo sac the other one disappeared after fertilization. In most cases the antipodal cells became degenerated in fertilization process, only some remained until the first division of primary endosperm nucleus. 3. In Beijing area the double fertilization of Actinidia chinensis occurred 30–72 hours after pollination. In the fertilization one sperm fused with egg nucleus and the other sperm fused with the secondary nucleus as usual. The fusion of the secondary nucleus with sperm was in advance of the fusion of the egg nudeus. 4. The endosperm is cellular type.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Ultrastructural studies on sperm-egg interaction at the time of fertilization inLaternula limicola were performed. The temporary-acrosome did not change morphologically while the sperm passed through the egg investments. At the onset of sperm entrance into the egg, however, the temporary-acrosome and mitochondria were eliminated from the sperm. Afterwards the sperm was engulfed by the egg surface without membrane fusion of the gametes. After entry the sperm nucleus was surrounded by four membranes: the plasma membranes of the egg and of the sperm, and the membranes of the sperm nuclear envelope. As the sperm nucleus differentiated into the male pronucleus, the plasma membranes of both the sperm and egg were initially vesiculated, then dispersed into the egg cytoplasm. Finally, the sperm nuclear envelope changed into the male pronuclear membrane accompanying sperm chromatin dispersion.  相似文献   

11.
Sperm-oocyte membrane fusion has been observed during monospermic fertilization of a human oocyte in vitro. Women were stimulated with both clomiphene citrate and human menopausal gonadotropin and were given human chorionic gonadotropin before a LH-surge. Twelve oocytes, collected at laparoscopy from six women who became pregnant by IVF, were allowed to mature for 7–14 hours in vitro and inseminated with preincubated sperm, fixed between 1–3 hours after insemination, and examined by transmission electron microscopy. Membrane fusion had occurred in one ovum 2 hours after insemination, and the oocyte had resumed maturation and was at anaphase II of meiosis. Cortical granules had been exocytosed, and some of their contents were visible at the surface close to the oolemma all around the oocyte. The sperm that fused with this oocyte was acrosome-reacted and had been partly incorporated into the ooplasm, while the anterior two-thirds of its head was phagocytosed by a tongue of cortical ooplasm. Membrane fusion had occurred between the oolemma and the plasma membrane overlying the postacrosomal segment of the sperm head, posterior to the equatorial vestige. Sperm chromatin had not decondensed, and serial sections revealed a midpiece attached to the basal plate and a tail located deeper in the ooplasm, all devoid of plasma membrane. Supplementary sperm penetrating the inner zona, approaching the perivitelline space, had undergone the acrosome reaction but had a persistent vestige of the equatorial segment of the acrosome with intact plasma membrane. Evidence of sperm chromatin decondensation was seen in other oocytes, 3 hours after insemination, which were at telophase II of meiosis. Eight oocytes penetrated by sperm were monospermic, while four were unfertilized. The general pattern of sperm fusion and incorporation appears to conform to that seen in most other mammals. The study also reveals that sperm have to complete the acrosome reaction before fusing with the egg.  相似文献   

12.
The cell-free extracts from animalXenopus laevis egg could induce chromatin decondensation and pronuclear formation from demembranated plant (Orychophragmus violaceu) sperm. The demembranatedOrychophragmus violaceus sperm began to swell in 30 min incubation, and then were gradually decondensed. The reassembly of nuclear envelope in the reconstituted nuclei had been visualized by means of electron microscopy and fluorescent microscopy. Membrane vesicles fused to form the double envelope around the periphery of the decondensed chromatin. The morphology of the newly formed nucleus, with a double membrane, was similar to those nuclei after fertilization. Transmission electron microscope micrograph of the whole mount prepared nuclear matrix-lamina showed the reconstituted nucleus to be filled with a dense network.  相似文献   

13.
Unfertilized eggs of the rose bitterling (Rhodeus ocellatus ocellatus) were squeezed out of females that had an elongated ovipositor and were dechorionated mechanically with fine forceps in physiological saline. The dechorionated eggs were transferred into fresh water then inseminated at once by spermatozoa of the same species. A large number of spermatozoa was found on the surface of eggs that had not yet had cortical reaction following insemination. The surface of the naked eggs responded by formation of many small cytoplasmic protrusions (viz., fertilization cones) at sperm attachment sites. The formed fertilization cones were rosettelike structures formed by the aggregation of some bleblike swellings devoid of microvilli and microplicae. About 10 min after insemination, the fertilization cones retracted, but marks of their presence characterized by less microvilli and microplicae remained in the eggs 15 min after insemination. Many spermatozoa penetrated into the cytoplasm of each naked egg. The sperm nuclear envelope disappeared by means of vesiculation resulting from fusion of the inner and outer membranes. The sperm nucleus decondensed and developed into a larger male pronucleus. Smooth-surfaced vesicles surrounded the decondensing sperm nucleus and formed the new male pronuclear envelope. Sperm mitochondria and flagella were found in the egg 15 min after insemination. The response of the egg surface to sperm entry and pronucleus formation are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Guo F  Hu SY  Yuan Z  Zee SY  Han Y 《Protoplasma》2005,225(1-2):5-14
Summary. In this paper, the stages of normal sexual reproduction between pollen tube penetration of the archegonium and early embryo formation in Pinus tabulaeformis are described, emphasizing the transmission of parental cytoplasm, especially the DNA-containing organelles – plastids and mitochondria. The pollen tube growing in the nucellus contained an irregular tube nucleus followed by a pair of sperm cells. The tube cytoplasm contained abundant organelles, including starch-containing plastids and mitochondria. The two sperm cells differed in their volume of cytoplasm. The leading sperm, with more cytoplasm, contained abundant plastids and mitochondria, while the trailing one, with a thin layer of cytoplasm, had very few organelles. The mature egg cell contained a great number of mitochondria, whereas it lacked normal plastids. At fertilization, the pollen tube penetrated into the egg cell at the micropylar end and released all of its contents, including the two sperms. One of the sperm nuclei fused with the egg nucleus, whereas the other one was retained by the receptive vacuole. Very few plastids and mitochondria of male origin were observed around the fusing sperm and egg nuclei, while the retained sperm nucleus was surrounded by a large amount of male cytoplasm. The discharged tube cytoplasm occupied a large micropylar area in the egg cell. In the free nuclear proembryo, organelles of maternal and paternal origins intermingled in the neocytoplasm around the free nuclei. Most of the mitochondria had the same features as those of the egg cell, but some appeared to be from sperm cells and tube cytoplasm. Plastids were obviously of male origin, with an appearance similar to those of the sperm or tube cells. After cellularization of the proembryo, maternal mitochondria became more abundant than the paternal ones and the plastids enlarged and began to accumulate starch. The results reveal the cytological mechanism for paternal inheritance of plastids and biparental inheritance of mitochondria in Chinese pine. Correspondence and reprints: State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, College of Biological Science, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100094, People’s Republic of China.  相似文献   

15.
Electron microscopic and cytochemical investigations were carried out on inseminated Arbacia oocytes comparing structural and chemical properties of their microvillous surface and fertilization cones. Early fertilization cones (up to 4 min postinsemination) were relatively small, smooth surface projections of cytoplasm that engulfed the incorporated sperm nucleus. However, in contrast to surrounding microvillous areas of the oocyte surface, enlarged fertilization cones (8 to 15 min postinsemination) had a distinctive crenated appearance that persisted until their regression. When examined by various cytochemical techniques, membrane delimiting fertilization cones had a much lower affinity for agents that stain negatively charged and carbohydrate moieties (cationized ferritin, concanavalin A, ruthenium red, and alcian blue) than did other regions of the oocyte surface. This difference in surface properties of membrane delimiting the site of sperm-egg fusion was not due solely to incorporated sperm plasma membrane and did not occur when inseminated oocytes were incubated with cytochalasin B. Little or no difference in the membrane of the fertilization cone versus microvillous areas was observed when inseminated eggs were freeze-fractured or prepared with agents (filipin and polymixin B) to demonstrate β-hydroxysterols and anionic phospholipids. These observations indicate that membrane delimiting the fertilization cone differs from the remainder of the oocyte surface and suggests that following insemination significant rearrangements of surface molecules take place within the egg plasmalemma that give rise to asymmetries in membrane topography.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Interphylum crossing was examined between sea urchin eggs (Temnopleurus hardwicki) and oyster sperm (Crassostrea gigas). The eggs could receive the spermatozoa with or without cortical change. The fertilized eggs that elevated the fertilization envelope began their embryogenesis. Electron microscopy revealed that oyster spermatozoa underwent acrosome reaction on the sea urchin vitelline coat, and their acrosomal membrane fused with the egg plasma membrane after the appearance of an intricate membranous structure in the boundary between the acrosomal process and the egg cytoplasm. Oyster spermatozoa penetrated sometimes into sea urchin eggs without stimulating cortical granule discharge and consequently without fertilization envelope formation. The organelles derived from oyster spermatozoa seemed to be functionally inactive in the eggs whose cortex remained unchanged.  相似文献   

18.
The aim of the present study was to determine the morphological changes that take place in the male and female gametes during in vivo fertilization in the Australian marsupial, the fat-tailed dunnart, Sminthopsis crassicaudata. Plastic sections were cut of sperm and eggs recovered from the oviducts of recently mated individuals, and light microscopy of thick, and transmission EM of thin, sections was carried out. It was found that, before penetration of the zona, the spermatozoon came to lie along the outer surface with its rostral tip forming a depression in the zona substance. During penetration, zona material was packed tightly around the spermatozoon, and no large hole was formed. A spermatozoon within the perivitelline space had made contact with the oolemma by way of its apical tip. In a spermatozoon partly incorporated into the ooplasm, fusion appeared to have taken place between its plasma membrane and that of the oolemma. Mucoid coat material became deposited outside the zona at this time; its existence and/or the release of cortical granule content probably prevented polyspermy. Once inside the egg cytoplasm, the sperm head sometimes travelled a considerable distance before chromatin decondensation occurred. In addition, it appeared to rotate somewhat on its axis at this time. Finally, some membranous structures were found around two condensed sperm heads in the ooplasm, which may have been part of the pronuclear envelope. Thus this study on in vivo fertilization in the dunnart documents, for the first time, some aspects of fertilization in an Australian marsupial as seen with the transmission electron microscope; it indicates a few differences from those previously found for the American opossum.  相似文献   

19.
The pathway of sperm entry during sea urchin fertilization was analyzed by using sperm covalently labeled with fluorescent and radioactive tracers. Sperm that have been covalently labeled on their surfaces with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) or a radioactive congener, diiodofluorescein isothiocyanate (125IFC), transfer labeled components to the egg that persist throughout early development. In order to study the transfer of sperm components and their fate after fertilization, cytochalasin B-dependent inhibition of fertilization, previously shown to permit the cortical reaction of sea urchin eggs but block sperm pronuclear incorporation, was investigated. Under certain conditions cytochalasin B or D (CB or CD) results in about half of the activated eggs having both the sperm nucleus and the fluorescently labeled sperm components arrested apparently at the level of the egg plasma membrane. This arrest of internalization was reversed by removal of CB or CD, and the sperm derivatives entered the egg. When sperm were labeled noncovalently with ethidium bromide or rhodamine 123, fluorescence was transferred to the egg in the cytochalasin-inhibited state in a fashion similar to that found in normal fertilization; in both cases the sperm fluorescence disappeared within a few minutes of fertilization, due to the repartitioning of the noncovalent dyes into the egg cytoplasm. It is concluded that cytochalasin arrests fertilization at an intermediate step in which the sperm has fused with the egg to achieve cytoplasmic continuity, but in which the subsequent internalization of sperm components is inhibited. After removal of cytochalasins the fluorescent sperm components move from the egg surface to an internal site, a process that can be monitored by time-lapse video microscopy with an image intensifier to permit extended observations of sperm fluorescence. The cytoplasmic location of labeled sperm components was substantiated by autoradiography of early embryos fertilized with 125IFC-labeled sperm; transfer of sperm components to an internal site was seen after fertilization of either sea urchin or mouse eggs. Taken together, the data suggest that the fate of the labeled sperm surface components, as well as that of the sperm nucleus, is to be transferred to the egg cytoplasm, and that this transfer is mediated by the actin-dependent cytoskeleton of the egg.  相似文献   

20.
The ultrastructure of oocyte and sperm nuclei was studied in mouse ovarian oocytes inseminated in vitro and cultured for 1 1/2 and 3 h in a medium containing dbcAMP or lacking the maturation inhibitor. In oocytes blocked at the germinal vesicle (GV) stage, certain maturation-linked changes were noted. Sperm apposition and sperm-oocyte fusion were similar to that during fertilization of ovulated oocytes. The sperm nucleus and its nuclear envelope remained intact after penetrating into the ovarian oocyte. One and a half h after removal of the drug (time 0 of maturation) the germinal vesicle (GV) and sperm nucleus remained intact. In oocytes maturing for 3 h, the nuclear envelopes of the GV and sperm nucleus had fragmented. The NE of the oocyte formed quadruple membranes while the NE of the sperm remained as flat vesicles. Oocyte chromatin condensed to form chromosomes, whereas at the same time the sperm chromatin was in the process of decondensation and was surrounded by fragments of the sperm NE. The sperm chromatin, composed of DNA complexed with protamines, consisted of thin fibrils; the individual fibrils measured 3.8 nm in diameter. Near the penetrated spermatozoa only occasional Mts were detected which were not related to the proximal centriole which was recognizable in the neck-piece of the flagellum. Thus in mouse oocytes the introduced sperm centriole is not capable of behaving as a centrosome and organizing microtubules in the form of an aster.  相似文献   

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