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Spermatogenesis of Glaridacris catostomi from Catostomus commersoni (Catostomidae) from Albany, New York (USA) was studied by means of TEM, SEM and squashes. Mature testes of G. catostomi contain all consecutive stages of spermatogenesis; primary spermatogonia are usually situated at the periphery and mature spermatozoa in the centre of testes. The primary spermatogonium divides mitotically, but the two daughter cells, secondary spermatogonia, remain connected with each other by a cytoplasmic bridge. Spermatogenesis in G. catostomi is of a rosette type. Six incomplete, synchronic cytokineses, five mitotic and meiotic divisions occur simultaneously, resulting in a cluster of four tertiary spermatogonia, then eight quaternary spermatogonia, and subsequently sixteen primary spermatocytes are formed. These enlarge, their nuclei move to the periphery and the cluster of cells takes on the form of rosette. After the first meiotic division, a rosette of thirty-two secondary spermatocytes is formed. The haploid nuclei of these are smaller and the cell membranes near the centre of the rosette become indistinct as the displacement of nuclei toward the periphery continues. The second maturation division results in sixty-four spermatids. During spermiogenesis, their nuclei subsequently elongate, migrate, and are transformed into electron-dense, filiform nuclei of spermatozoa. Each spermatid forms at the surface a so-called "zone of differentiation". From this conical zone arise initially three elongating processes: cytoplasmic extension and two lateral flagella. The spermiogenesis type observed in G. catostomi is characterised by an early abortion of the second axoneme. The remaining single axoneme, forming the sperm flagellum, elongates in parallel with cytoplasmic process accommodating the sperm nucleus; the two parts are initially separated. The migration of the sperm nucleus induces their lateral fusion, which is, however, very superficial; the flagellar axoneme and sperm nucleus are never incorporated completely into a common sperm body as observed in pseudophyllideans or cyclophyllideans. The spermatozoon of G. catostomi consists of two elongate parts: nucleated sperm body with a row of cortical microtubules and flagellum connected by a narrow, longitudinal bridge throughout nearly the entire length. The flagellum consists of a single axoneme of the 9 + '1' Platyhelminthes type. The value of spermiogenesis type and sperm ultrastructure as taxonomie tools in platyhelminth phylogeny is discussed.
Vitellogenesis in Khaxvia armeniaca was examined by means of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and cytochemical staining with periodic acid-thiosemicarbazide-silver proteinate (PA-TSC-SP) for specific detection of glycogen at the ultrastructural level. Mature vitelline follicles consist of cells in various stages of development, progressing from immature cells of gonial type near the periphery to mature vitellocytes towards the centre. Maturation of vitelline cells is characterized by: (1) increase in cell volume; (2) increase in nuclear surface area restoring the N/C ratio; (3) nucleolar transformation; (4) extensive development of large parallel cisternae of GER, the shell-protein producing units; (5) development of Golgi complexes engaged in shell-granule/shell-globule vitelline material formation and package; (6) formation and storage of glycogen in the cytoplasm; (7) simultaneous, independent formation and storage of intranuclear glycogen; (8) continuous fusion of small shell-granules into larger shell-globules that fuse into large shell-globule clusters with a progressive increase in the number and size of the latter; and (9) degeneration of GER in the medial layer of vitellocyte cytoplasm with degenerative changes and accumulation of glycogen and shell-globule clusters within the cytoplasm, associated with a massive accumulation of glycogen in the nucleus. The functional significance of the large amount of nuclear and cytoplasmic glycogen and numerous shell-globule clusters is analysed. The ultrastructural aspect of vitellogenesis is compared with that in other monozoic and polyzoic cestodes. Conclusions concerning the interrelationships of vitellogenesis patterns and ultrastructural cytochemistry of mature vitellocytes to the various types of embryogenesis, are drawn and discussed.
Ultrastructural and cytochemical characteristics of GER-bodies observed in the vitellocyte cytoplasm of the intrauterine eggs of the caryophyllidean cestode Wenyonia virilis are described. In this species GER-bodies were observed only in the cytoplasm of vitellocytes, surrounded by a newly formed egg-shell. They are composed of spherical areas of condensed, electron-dense cytoplasm which contains concentrically arranged parallel lamellae of granular endoplasmic reticulum (GER), forming characteristic balls of different sizes. Each GER-body is surrounded by numerous free ribosomes, polyribosomes, α-glycogen rosettes and large mitochondria. Results of cytochemical analysis by means of PATSC-SP test for polysaccharides indicated that glycogen is absent within the GER-bodies, however, a strongly positive reaction was observed only in large aggregations of α-glycogen rosettes and β-glycogen particles, localised usually near GER-bodies.
Ultrastructural evidence for early intraurerine embryonic development of Wenyonia virilis is presented. At the initial stage of egg formation, the fertilized oocyte or ovum is surrounded by numerous vitellocytes and newly formed eggshell. Individual vitellocytes undergo progressive fusion into a vitelline syncytium. During cleavage divisions, three types of blastomeres are formed: macromeres, mesomeres and micromeres. Two large macromeres contain a large nucleus with spherical nucleolus and numerous small heterochromatin islands dispersed in moderately electron-dense nucleoplasm. The granular cytoplasm shows a few large mitochondria. Medium-sized mesomeres contain a spherical nucleus with numerous heterochromatin islands, adjacent to the nuclear envelope, and a prominent electron-dense nucleolus. Their nuclei are embedded in granular cytoplasm with a few large and numerous small mitochondria and Golgi complexes. The small micromeres are characterized by presence of spherical nucleoli with large areas of highly condensed heterochromatin and a few islands of granular electron-lucent nucleoplasm. Their granular cytoplasm shows a few small lipid droplets and several spherical mitochondria. Majority of micromeres give rise to the hexacanth but many of them also undergo degeneration or apoptosis. Both mesomeres and macromeres are engaged in the formation of the oncospheral envelopes. The outer envelope is formed by a fusion of two macromeres whereas the inner envelope originates from a fusion of mesomeres. The intrauterine eggs of W. virilis usually contain an embryo at the early preoncopheral phase of development and possesses three primary envelopes: (1) thick eggshell; (2) thin cytoplasmic layer of the outer envelope and (3) inner envelope. Based on embryonic development, egg type and life-cycle characteristics, caryophyllideans tend to show closer affinities to spathebothriideans than to the former pseudophyllideans.
The ultrastructure of spermiogenesis in Wenyonia virilis Woodland, 1923, a caryophyllaeid cestode from the silurid Nile fish Synodontis schall (Bloch et Schneider, 1801), is described by means of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) for the first time. Spermiogenesis follows the characteristic caryophyllidean type and is initiated by the formation of a differentiation zone. This area, delimited at its base by a ring of arching membranes and bordered by cortical microtubules, contains two centrioles associated with typical striated rootlets with a reduced intercentriolar body between them. The apical area of the differentiation zone exhibits electron-dense material that is present only during the early stages of spermiogenesis. Only one of the centrioles develops into a free flagellum that grows at an angle of >90° in relation to the cytoplasmic extension. Spermiogenesis is also characterized by a flagellar rotation and a proximodistal fusion of the flagellum with the cytoplasmic extension. The most interesting features observed in W virilis are the presence of a reduced, very narrow intercentriolar body and the unique type of flagellar rotation >90°. Results are compared with those described in two caryophyllideans, Glaridacris catostomi Cooper, 1920 and Khawia armeniaca (Cholodkovski, 1915). Contrary to the original report of Świderski and Mackiewicz (2002), that flagellar rotation has never been observed in spermiogenesis of G. catostomi, re-assessment of their description and illustrations leads us to conclude that flagellar rotation must logically occur in that species. The value of various morphological features of sperm in phylogenetic inference is discussed.
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