Affiliation:
1. 1 Naturalis Biodiversity Center Darwinweg 2 2333CR Leiden the Netherlands
2. 2 Institute Biology Leiden Leiden University Sylviusweg 72 2333BE Leiden the Netherlands
3. 3 Department of Animal and Plant Sciences University of Sheffield Western Bank Sheffield S10 2TN UK
4. 4 Forensic Science Dept Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences Weesperzijde 190 1097 DZ Amsterdam the Netherlands
Abstract
In animals, cell polarity may initiate symmetry breaking very early in development, ultimately leading to whole-body asymmetry. Helical sperm cells, which occur in a variety of animal clades, are one class of cells that show clearly visible bilateral asymmetry. We used scanning-electron microscopy to study coiling direction in helical sperm cells in two groups of animals that have figured prominently in the sperm morphology literature, namely land snails, Stylommatophora (514 spermatozoa, from 27 individuals, belonging to 8 species and 4 families) and songbirds, Passeriformes (486 spermatozoa, from 26 individuals, belonging to 18 species and 8 families). We found that the snail sperm cells were consistently dextral (clockwise), whereas the bird sperm cells were consistently sinistral (counterclockwise). We discuss reasons why this apparent evolutionary conservatism of sperm cell chirality may or may not be related to whole-body asymmetry.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
4 articles.
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