Ultrastructure of Spermatozoa and Spermatids in Bonellia viridis and Hamingia arctica (Echiura) With Some Phylogenetic Considerations |
| |
Authors: | ke Franz n,Marco Ferraguti |
| |
Affiliation: | Åke Franzén,Marco Ferraguti |
| |
Abstract: | Spermatozoa of the echiurans Bonellia viridis and Hamingia arctica show a similar ultrastructure. They are of a modified type. The head consists of a roughly cylindrical nucleus, which has a cover of electron-dense material. The acrosome is very large and consists of an acrosomal vesicle and a rod-shaped perforatorium or acrosomal rod. In close association with the nucleus, one or two mitochondria are found forming an irregular ring around the posterior tip of the nucleus and the centriolar apparatus. There are two centrioles, the proximal one with the conventional triplet microtubular structure. The tail flagellum is about 50 μm long and has the 9+2 axonemal structure. The oblique attachment of the acrosome to the anterior part of the nucleus gives the spermatozoon a bilateral symmetry. However, in the nuclear morphology, the arrangement of electron-dense material around the nucleus, in the mitochondria, and in the attachment of the tail flagellum, the spermatozoon shows asymmetric organization. The sperm structure in bonelliids is unique but its genesis and the morphology of the mitochondrial midpiece support the theory that the echiurans are related to the annelids. The main results of the study are summarized in Fig. 11. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|