Fibrogranular Material,Annulate Lamellae and Microtubules During Spermiogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster |
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Authors: | Richard G. Kessel |
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Abstract: | During spermiogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster, a “perinuclear plasm’ accumulates between the fenestrated portion of the nuclear envelope and an adjacent lamella of ER in the young spermatid. Microtubules appear within the perinuclear plasm and become especially concentrated in a nuclear concavity. Cytoplasmic pores are present locally within the lamella of ER. In addition, localized or discrete bodies composed of fibrogranular material become closely associated with single pore complexes in the lamella of ER. A close association exists between pore complexes (annulate lamellae), the small granular and fibrillar subunits of the fibrogranular bodies, polyribosomes and the nuclear-associated microtubules during much of spermiogenesis. While the fibrogranular material becomes less concentrated during spermiogenesis, the number of pore complexes in a single section increases such that two, three or even four short annulate lamellae are intercalated within many longitudinally oriented microtubules which are present in the furrow of the spermatid nucleus. Structural relationships observed between cytoplasmic pores (annulate lamellae), fibrogranular bodies, polyribosomes and microtubules are discussed in relation to information about the timing of RNA and protein synthesis. This study extends previous observations about the distribution and structural variations of annulate lamellae elsewhere in the spermatid cytoplasm. |
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