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1.
The spermatozoon and some spermatid stages of Siboglinum (Pogonophora) have been examined by light and electron microscopy. In the spermatozoon a helical acrosome, a helical nucleus and a “body” with axonema follow each other in normal sequence. Head and tail are joined by a very short neck region containing two modified centrioles. The posterior portion of the nucleus is surrounded by a mitochondrial sheath consisting of three tightly wound mitochondrial helices. In the main portion of the tail the 9+2 unit is sorrounded by a granular sheath of dense material. In the neck region a centriole adjunct develops into a dense substance containing about nine rods. At an early stage, when the centriolar apparatus and flagellum become associated with the nucleus, three large mitochondria with fairly regular cristae are seen at the base of the nucleus. A well developed Golgi apparatus is present in early stages. Rows of microtubules are observed encircling the spermatid nucleus. Compared with the primitive type of spermatozoon the pogonophore sperm shows elongated and specialized nucleus, acrosome and mitochondria. It is concluded that the ancestral form must have had a fairly primitive spermatozoon and that evolution has proceeded towards a modified sperm with complicated spiral structure in connection with the evolution of a modified biology of fertilization, viz. specialized spermatophores. It is not known how the spermatophore discharges the spermatozoa nor how the spermatozoa find their way to the eggs. Two kinds of sperms are produced in the gonads of Siboglinum. The atypical sperm is smaller than the typical one.  相似文献   

2.
通过电光学显微镜和透射电子显微镜观察了平疣桑椹石磺精子的形态及其超微结构。平疣桑椹石磺成熟精子属于进化型,由头部、中段和末段组成。头部由顶体和精核构成,顶体长约0.7μm,呈细奶嘴状,内含物分布均匀,电子密度稍低于细胞核。顶体基部与精核前端紧密相连,无间隙。精核长约3.8μm,宽约1.0μm,核质高度浓缩,电子密度高,无核泡,纵切似辣椒状,核后端内凹形成核后窝。中段加长,结构复杂,线粒体演化成线粒体鞘,螺旋状包绕轴丝。精子末段由轴丝及包绕轴丝的质膜组成,轴丝为典型的“9+2”结构。比较了平疣桑椹石磺精子与相关腹足类精子结构的异同,进一步证实了腹足纲贝类精子结构之间的区别主要在于顶体有无及形态,精核的长短与外形、中段线粒体的数目及其排列方式等。  相似文献   

3.
The spermatozeugmata (sperm bundles lacking a distinct wall) from the spermathecae of Tubifex tubifex are composed of two different zones: an internal axial cylinder containing conventional spermatozoa and an external cortex composed of modified spermatozoa, tightly packed together. The conventional spermatozoa conform to the classical clitellate scheme: very long and thin with a complex acrosome, a filiform nucleus, small mitochondria, and a flagellum with Y links and β glycogen granules as accessory structures. The modified spermatozoa show “empty” acrosomes, degenerating nuclei, and tails which contain γ glycogen granules. The tails are helically wound around the spermatozeugma and are connected to each other by junctional complexes. The tips of the cortical tails are free and move with a metachronal wave. The presence of two sperm types in tubificids is discussed and a protective function for the modified cortical spermatozoa is proposed.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract Spermatids in different stages of development are connected by intercellular bridges. Later the disappearance of these is correlated with sloughing off the residual cytoplasm. At the onset of spermiogenesis, chromatin is agglomerated at the periphery of the nucleus. Later this disperses and no chromatin condensation takes place. There is a steady reduction in the nucleus size. This is correlated with increase in the number of small vesicles and microtubules in the cytoplasm. Eventually the nucleus becomes very small, and is surrounded by a complex system of microtubules. Following spermiogenesis process the mitochondria lose their cristae and contain adielectronic material. The mature sperm is spindle-shaped, tapering at both ends. In both ends there are only microtubules present terminating freely in the cytoplasm. In its middle there are a number of rod-shaped mitochondria containing an electron dense material. The microtubules in the middle part of the sperm are arranged in a hexagonal pattern and in others in rows interspersed with single ones. The structure of Pycnogonum littorale sperm is highly modified, which may explain the special mode of fertilisation.  相似文献   

5.
Osedax is a genus of siboglinid annelids in which the females live on dead vertebrate bones on the seafloor. These females have a posterior end that lies within the bone and contains the ovarian tissue, as well as the “roots” involved with bone degradation and nutrition. The males are microscopic and live as “harems” in the lumen of the gelatinous tube that surrounds the female trunk, well away from the ovary. Females are known to spawn fertilized primary oocytes, suggesting internal fertilization. However, little is known about sperm transfer, sperm storage, or the location of fertilization, and the morphology of the female reproductive system has not been described and compared with the reproductive systems of other siboglinids. A 3D‐reconstruction of the ovisac of Osedax showed ovarian tissue with multiple lobes and mature oocytes stored in a “uterus” before being released through the single oviduct. The oviduct emerges as a gonopore on the trunk and travels along the trunk to finally open to the seawater as a thin cylindrical tube among the crown of palps. Light and transmission electron microscopy of mature Osedax sperm revealed elongate heads consisting of a nucleus with helical grooves occupied by mitochondria. In contrast to other Siboglinidae, Osedax sperm are not packaged into spermatophores or spermatozeugmata, and Osedax females lack a discrete region for sperm storage. Transmission electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy allowed detection of sperm associated with ovarian tissue of the female ovisac of four different Osedax species. This provides the first evidence for the site of internal fertilization in Osedax. A heart body was found in the circulatory system, as seen in other siboglinids and some other annelids. The possible presence of nephridia in the anterior ovisac region was also documented. These morphological features provide new insights for comparing the regionalization of Osedax females in relation to other siboglinids.  相似文献   

6.
The ultrastructure of sperm from 13 species in 11 genera of Laminariales collected in the northeast Pacific Ocean is unique in the brown algae. The sperm are elongate, and possess a nucleus, several mitochondria and two or three chloroplasts, but no eyespot. The anterior flagellum bears mastigonemes on the proximal half of its length; a distal “whiplash” portion lacks mastigonemes and is an extension of only the two central singlet microtubules of the axoneme. A peculiar feature of these sperm is the posterior flagellum, which is longer than the anterior flagellum and tapers distally as the doublet microtubules become singlets and decrease in number. This feature contrasts with the laminarialean zoospore, which possesses a short posterior flagellum with the usual “9 + 2” axoneme. The structure of these sperm differs from that reported for Chorda, the sperm of which resembles a primitive brown algal zoospore. The facts support the concept that Chorda is the most primitive member of the Laminariales.  相似文献   

7.
This is the first study investigating spermatogenesis and spermatozoan ultrastructure in the polyclad flatworm Prosthiostomum siphunculus. The testes are numerous and scattered as follicles ventrally between the digestive ramifications. Each follicle contains the different stages of sperm differentiation. Spermatocytes and spermatids derive from a spermatogonium and the spermatids remain connected by intercellular bridges. Chromatoid bodies are present in the cytoplasm of spermatogonia up to spermatids. During early spermiogenesis, a differentiation zone appears in the distal part of spermatids. A ring of microtubules extends along the entire sperm shaft just beneath the cell membrane. An intercentriolar body is present and gives rise to two axonemes, each with a 9 + “1” micro‐tubular pattern. Development of the spermatid leads to cell elongation and formation of a filiform, mature spermatozoon with two free flagella and with cortical microtubules along the sperm shaft. The flagella exit the sperm shaft at different levels, a finding common for acotyleans, but so far unique for cotylean polyclads. The Golgi complex produces numerous electron‐dense bodies of two types and of different sizes. These bodies are located around a perinuclear row of mitochondria. The elongated nucleus extends almost along the entire sperm body. The nucleus is wide in the proximal part and becomes narrow going towards the distal end. Thread‐like chromatin mixed with electron‐dense intranuclear spindle‐shaped bodies are present throughout nucleus. The general sperm ultrastructure, the presence of intranuclear bodies and a second type of cytoplasmic electron‐dense bodies may provide characters useful for phylogenetic analysis.  相似文献   

8.
The formation of the flagellum in the spermatid of the Japanese land snail, Euhadra hickonis, is introduced by the appearance of a central indentation in the differentiated posterior side of the spherical nucleus early in spermiogenesis. One centriole moves to this part of the cell, changes in several structural respects and acquires a short-lived “centriole adjunct”. At first it lies tangential to the nuclear surface as it begins to induce formation of the flagellar axoneme; then it turns so that its proximal end fits into the deepening nuclear indentation (“implantation fossa”). Cytoplasmic tubules appear to mediate this shift in direction. Internal changes in the centriolar components begin as it initiates formation of the axoneme, and continue throughout spermiogenesis. First, a dense “cap” forms at its proximal end, the microtubular triplets become doublets and a pair of singlets occupies the center of the complex. All these microtubules extend from the dense cap and are continuous with those of the axoneme. As the basal body (modified centriole) becomes set in the implantation fossa, the material of the centriole adjunct forms 9 strands, which are continuous with the peripheral coarse fibers when these develop. The microtubular doublets of the basal body are visible for a short time between the fiber strands; in the mature spermatozoon they are found embedded in the basal body portions of the coarse fibers in a degenerated form. Posterior to the basal body, however, they separate from the inner sides of the striated coarse fibers and become the doublets of the axoneme. The proximal part of the elongating axoneme lies in a posterior extension of the cell, in which glycogen particles and mitochondria are conspicuous. As the mitochondria unite into a sheath tightly surrounding the axoneme, the structure of their cristae changes to form a paracrystal-line “mitochondria derivative”, which consists of many layers close to the nucleus and progressively fewer posteriorly. Outside of this “primary sheath”, more modified mitochondria unite to form a “secondary sheath” of paracrystalline lamellae which encloses a compartment, filled with glycogen particles, that extends in a low-pitched helix nearly to the end of the flagellum. In the late spermatid, microtubules become arranged at regular intervals around the nucleus and secondary sheath of the flagellum for a short period while the remaining cytoplasm and spermatid organelles such as the Golgi complex are being discarded. The flagellum of the mature spermatozoon is 250–300 μm in length, tapering gradually from a diameter of ca 1 μm just behind the nucleus to less than 0.3 μm at its tip, as the result of reduction in the amount of stored glycogen, the number of paracrystalline lamellae and the diameter of the peripheral fibers.  相似文献   

9.
Oogenesis of the fresh-water triclad Dugesia dorotocephala has been studied by electron microscopical methods, with particular regard to the genesis and composition of the so-called “Balbiani body.” Its origin is clearly recognizable in young oocytes where the few mitochondria present seem to gather at the level of the perinuclear ooplasm. Here they surround dense masses of finely granular, fibrillar material probably coming from the nucleus. During the previtelloge ic period, mitochondria rapidly increase in number while the dense masses progressively dissolve. In the vitellogenic oocytes the Balbiani body shows its final configuration: it appears as a large area (up to 15-20 pm in diameter) consisting of innumerable densely packed mitochondria, some smooth vesicles and free ribosomes. This aggregate of cytoplasmic organelles remains unmodified in the mature oocytes. The function of the “Balbiani body” of D. dorotocephala is as yet unclear; it can only be asserted that it is not correlated with yolk production in which the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi complex are involved.  相似文献   

10.
C. Dumas  R. B. Knox  T. Gaude 《Protoplasma》1985,124(3):168-174
Summary In mature viable pollen ofBrassica oleracea, the pair of sperm cells and the nucleus of the vegetative cell are linked to form a structured unit we term the male germ unit. The sperm cells are held within a common periplasm and have no cell walls. Each sperm cell has a central globular body containing the nucleus surrounded by several evaginations which provide the means for linkage between them. One sperm cell, usually that closest to the nucleus of the vegetative cell contains most of mitochondria profiles (plastids are absent). This sperm cell appears to be linked by its protoplasmic evaginations to the envelope of the vegetative nucleus. The role of this unit in interactions with the female gametic complex is considered.  相似文献   

11.
The sperm of Aristeus antennatus presents notable differences in relation to the two basic models of decapod crustaceans considered to date. Basically, it does not present a single appendage, or spike, characteristic of the so-called unistellate sperm of the suborder Dendrobranchiata and the infraorder Caridea of the suborder Pleocyemata. Nor does it have arms or spikes characteristic of the multistellate sperm that all belong to the Pleocyemata group. The spermatozoa of A. antennatus are composed of a nucleus and an electron-dense acrosome, which have the polarity of multistellate sperm. A number of mitochondria and vesicles are present in the cytoplasm, located between the acrosome and the nucleus. In accordance with the fine structural details, the morphology of the sperm has been described at two different levels of the male gonad, the vas deferens and terminal ampulla, and in the spermatophore placed in the thelycum of the female. Three ultrastructural changes in the acrosome (unorganized structures, tubular organization, disintegration process) and the nucleus (uncondensed, condensed, and compact) are present along the male reproductive apparatus. They first appear in a non-organized manner at the level of the vas deferens, subsequently undergo a process of structural configuration in the ampulla, and finally show disorganized structures in the spermatophore. J. Morphol. 234:79–87, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Testicular spermatozoa and sperm development in the archaeogastropod Calliotropis glyptus Watson (Trochoidae: Trochidae) are examined using transmission electron microscopy and formalin-fixed tissues. During spermiogenesis, the acrosome, formed evidently through fusion of Golgi-derived proacrosomal vesicles, becomes deeply embedded in the condensing spermatid nucleus. Two centrioles (proximal and distal), both showing triplet microtubular substructure, are present in spermatids—the distal centriole giving rise to the sperm tail and its associated rootlet. During formation of the basal invagination in the spermatid nucleus, centrioles, and rootlet move towards the nucleus and come to lie totally within the basal invagination. Mitochondria are initially positioned near the base of the nucleus but subsequently become laterally displaced. Morphology of the mature spermatozoon is modified from that of the classic primitive or ect-aquasperm type by having 1) the acrosome embedded in the nucleus (the only known example within the Mollusca), 2) a deep basai invagination in the nucleus containing proximal and distal centrioles and an enveloping matrix (derived from the rootlet), 3) laterally displaced periaxonemal mitochondria, and 4) a tail extending from the basal invagination of the nucleus. Implantation of the acrosomal complex and centrioles within imaginations of the nucleus and lateral displacement of mitochondria effectively minimize the length of the sperm head and midpiece. Such modifications may be associated with motility demands, but this remains to be established. The unusual features of C. glyptus spermatozoa, though easily derivable from ‘typical’ trochoid sperm architecture, may prove useful in delineating the genus Calliotropis or tracing its relationship to other genera within the trochid subfamily Margaritinae.  相似文献   

13.
Summary In the present electron microscopic study of spermatogenesis in the crayfish, Cambaroides japonicus, it was possible to clarify several aspects of the unusual differentiation which leads to the production of an aflagellate sperm. The centriole is followed from the metaphase of the second spermatocyte division to the time at which, in the nearly mature sperm, it appears to disintegrate. It has no connection with the acrosome but in the late spermatid and maturing sperm it is found randomly oriented among the convoluted membranes of the filamentous endoplasmic reticulum.There appears to be a close association of mitochondria with the developing acrosomal vesicle. Typical mitochondria, however, are not present after the late spermatid stage of development. It is suggested that the complex lamellar bodies associated with the nuclear envelope in the late stages of spermatogenesis may be related to mitochondria for these lamellar bodies resemble the complex mitochondria found in the adjacent nutritive cells.The development of the acrosome has been traced from an aggregate of dense granules which first appear in the interzonal spindle region and are later segregated at one side of the cell after the second spermatocyte division. As differentiation proceeds, tubular elements appear and disappear within the acrosome, while somewhat later, fibrous elements appear in the matrix. In the mature acrosome, the fibrous elements remain only adjacent to the granular periphery of the acrosome and the core again becomes homogeneous.No typical Golgi complex is found in these cells at any time during their differentiation.In the maturing sperm the development of the arms of the nucleus was studied. Preceding the differentiation of the arms a coarse fibrous material develops in the periphery of the nucleus. It is shown that the fibrillar material in the matrix of the arms is in continuity with the fibrillar material in the matrix of the nucleus proper.Supported in part by Grant No. B 2314 of the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness, U.S. Public Health Service.Predoctoral Research Fellow of the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness, U.S. Public Health Service.  相似文献   

14.
The fine structure of the developing spermatids and the mature sperm of Nippostrongylus brasiliensis was investigated. Immature spermatids are found at one end of the tubelike testis, and the mature sperm at the other. The spermatid has a prominent nucleus, with the chromatin clumped at the margin. It also contains a pair of centrioles, located near the nucleus. The cytoplasm is filled with ribosomal clusters, but it lacks an organized Golgi area or endoplasmic reticulum. Besides the normal mitochondria, the spermatid has specialized mitochondrionlike inclusions with dense matrix, few broad cristae, and a crystalloid structure always facing the nucleus. As spermiogenesis proceeds, the nucleus elongates, comes to lie at one end, and later evaginates to form a separate head structure, leaving the mitochondria and other cytoplasmic organelles in a broad cytoplasmic region. The nuclear material becomes filamentous and spiral, and the centrioles come to lie at one end near the junction of the head and the cytoplasmic portion of the sperm. Microtubules are found in the cytoplasmic region extending from the tubelike nucleus. The specialized mitochondria are about eighteen in number, and are arranged in rows in staggered groups of three around the microtubules in the cytoplasmic region. The mature sperm is aflagellate and lacks an acrosome. No movement of the sperm was ever observed.  相似文献   

15.
Summary

Mature sperm of Prorhynchus sp. have an elongated nucleus, multiple mitochondria and dense bodies, and two free axonemes which are located in grooves of the main shaft for much of their length. The axonemes are subterminally inserted and have the typical 9+ ‘1’ arrangement unique to Platyhelminthes and synapomorphic for taxa of Trepaxonemata. The testis follicles examined had small numbers of developing spermatids and very few mature sperm were present. During spermiogenesis, spermatids remain joined in clusters by distinctive bridges. In each spermatid two centrioles (with an intercentriolar body between them) give rise to free axonemes which grow out in opposite directions from each other. Indistinct ciliary rootlets are present. The axonemes are carried distally from the main spermatid mass on an elongating process and turn back towards the main spermatid mass. Nucleus, mitochondria and dense bodies move into the shaft, and the spermatid elongates before detaching from others in the cluster. This is the first detailed study of sperm and spermiogenesis in Lecithoepitheliata. Mature sperm are distinctly different from those of prolecithophorans, to which they are reputedly related, the latter having aflagellate sperm without dense bodies.  相似文献   

16.
The spermatozoon of Lepidogalaxias salamandroides possesses an acrosome (putative), one or two perforatoria (putative) but no nine-triplet centrioles. Two elongated mitochondria (12 μm long) are situated in parallel between the nucleus (20 μm long) and the axoneme (53 μm long). The above features are unique among other teleosts with internal fertilization. The presence of an “acrosome” in this primitive teleost supports the hypothesis that this structure has been secondarily lost in teleosts during evolution. The uncertainty of phylogenetic placement of this fish is reflected by its unique sperm ultrastructure.  相似文献   

17.
Early spermatids of the onychophoran Peripatopsis capensis are spherical cells with a centrally located nucleus, numerous mitochondria, Golgi complexes, microtubules and two centrioles. During spermiogenesis, Golgi vesicles migrate to one side of the cell where they form a tight aggregate, which is later shed. The mature spermatozoon has no acrosome. Several mitochondria fuse to form a middle piece containing three large mitochondria. Nucleus and middle-piece elongate, presumably under the influence of helically twisted microtubules. Outside this set of microtubules a continuous layer of endoplasmic reticulum cisternae is formed which separates the interior portion of the cell from an external cytoplasmic rim, which is later shed. Outside the 9 + 2 complex, the tail presents nine accessory microtubules, and a peripheral layer of microtubules beneath the plasma membrane. The enforcement of the tail structure may be related to the fertilization biology of this animal, which is by “hypodermal” impregnation.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The present study examines spermiogenesis, and in particular the formation of the acrosome, in ten species of chitons belonging to four families. This study emphasizes the formation of the acrosome but brings to light several other structures that have received little or no mention in previous studies. The process of spermiogenesis is essentially similar in each species, although Chaetopleura exhibits some significant differences. In early spermiogenesis the Golgi body secretes numerous small pro-acrosomal vesicles that gradually migrate into the apical cytoplasm. The chromatin condenses from granules into fibres which become twisted within the nucleus. A small bundle of chromatin fibres projects from the main nuclear mass into the anterior filament; this coincides with the appearance of a developing manchette of microtubules around the nucleus that originates from the two centrioles. Radiating from the distal centriole is the centriolar satellite complex, which is attached to the plasma membrane by the annulus. The distal centriole produces the flagellum posteriorly and it exits eccentrically through a ring of folded membrane that houses the annulus. Extending from the annulus on one side of the flagellum, in all but one species, is a dense fibrous body that has not been previously reported. The proximal centriole lies perpendicular to the end of the distal centriole and is attached to it by fibro-granular material. Pro-acrosomal vesicles migrate anteriorly through the cytoplasm and move into the anterior filament to one side of the expanding nucleus. Eventually these vesicles migrate all the way to the tip of the sperm, where they fuse to form one of two granules in the acrosome. In mature sperm the nucleus is bullet-shaped with a long anterior filament and contains dense chromatin with occasional lacunae. The mitochondria vary in both number and position in the mature sperm of different species. Both centrioles are housed eccentrically in a posterior indentation of the nucleus, where the membranes are modified. The elongate flagellum tapers to a long filamentous end-piece that roughly corresponds to the anterior filament and may be important in sperm locomotion for hydrodynamic reasons. An acrosome is present in all ten species and stained positively for acid phosphatase in three species that were tested.  相似文献   

19.
Summary The male germ unit ofPetunia hybrida was examined quantitatively and qualitatively at the ultrastructutral level. Three-dimensional reconstructions, the determination of nuclear and cytoplasmic volumes and surface areas, and organelle counts were obtained from serial ultrathin sections and computer analysis. In the mature pollen grain, an elongated generative cell is found in direct physical association with and partially surrounded by the vegetative nucleus. The mature generative cell lacks plastids and has mitochondria equally distributed at both of its tapering ends. In the pollen tube, the sperm cells are physically associated by cytoplasmic connections to each other and to the surrounding vegetative cell membrane. At full style length, the lobed vegetative nucleus and sperm pair are found in close association near the end of the pollen tube. The two sperms of a pair are not strongly dimorphic.  相似文献   

20.
The spermatozoon of Hemirhamphodon pogonognalhus shows modifications that are frequent though not obligate in internally fertilizing sperm, notably elongation of the nucleus and extension of the mitochondria of the midpiece as an elongate sheath around the proximal region of the axoneme. These similarities to poecilid and jenynsid sperm are considered homoplasic. As in the mature sperm of all but one investigated teleost, an acrosome is absent. The elongate, blade-shaped, electron-dense nucleus has a mean length of 3.2 μm; its basal implantation fossa, less than one-tenth of the length of the nucleus, houses the anterior half of the distal and only centriole (of triplet construction with satellite rays), a centriolar plug, and a mass connecting the centriole to the wall of the fossa. A unilateral putative centriole adjunct is present. The anterior region of the axoneme is surrounded by a mitochondrial sleeve, and internal to this, separated by a cisterna, by a submitochondrial sleeve. The mitochondrial sleeve unites posteriorly with the submitochondrial sleeve. Between the submitochondrial sleeve and the axoneme is a space, the cytoplasmic canal, that is open to the exterior posteriorly. The discrete, cristate mitochondria, in their sleeve, are unique in investigated atherinomorph sperm in being bilateral, grouped on only two opposing sides of the axoneme, with an arc-shaped ‘intermitochondrial link’ between. The 9 + 2 flagellum is unique for the Animalia in having 23 radial subplasmalemmal rods, repeated longitudinally (periodicity 0.025 pm) in a quasicrystalline array. Internal fertilization is deduced to have arisen in the Exocoetoidei independently of that in the Cyprinidcntiformes.  相似文献   

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