Author:
Pasternak J.,Samoiloff M. R.
Abstract
By electron microscopy it was found that two kinds of cytoplasmic organelles occur during spermatogenesis in the free-living nematode Panagrellus silusiae. One type of organelle is called a vesicular body (v-body) and lines the complete internal cell surface of the spherical and aflagellate sperm. V-bodies (about 0.35 μm × 0.6 μm) are formed in the primary spermatocytes and after meiosis they migrate to the surface of the spermatid. In the primary spermatocytes, before the appearance of v-bodies, many double membrane - bound, ovoid crystalline bodies (c-bodies) are formed. These bodies (about 0.5 μm × 0.7 μm) subsequently degenerate and no trace of their fibrillar material is observed in the spermatozoon.The mature sperm is devoid of microtubules, centrioles, Golgi material, and acrosomal-like structures; however, numerous mitochondria lie beneath the surface vesicles and in the central region of the mature sperm the chromatin occurs as discrete condensed clumps.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
26 articles.
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