Sperm morphogenesis in wild-type and fertilization-defective mutants of Caenorhabditis elegans.
Open Access
- 1 October 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 91 (1), 26-44
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.91.1.26
Abstract
Taking advantage of conditions that allow spermatogenesis in vitro, the timing and sequence of morphological changes leading from the primary spermatocyte to the spermatozoon is described by light and electron microscopy. Together with previous studies, this allows a detailed description of the nuclear, cytoplasmic, and membrane changes occurring during spermatozoan morphogenesis. By comparison with wild type, abnormalities in spermatogenesis leading to aberrant infertile spermatozoa are found in six fertilization-defective (fer) mutants. In fer-1 mutant males, spermatids appear normal, but during spermiogenesis membranous organelles (MO) fail to fuse with the sperm plasma membrane and a short, though motile. pseudopod is formed. In fer-2, fer-3, and fer-4 mutants, spermatids accumulate 48-nm tubules around their nuclei where the centriole and an RNA containing perinuclear halo would normally be. In all three mutants, spermatids still activate to spermatozoa with normal fusion of their MOs, but the pseudopods formed are aberrant in most fer-2 and fer-4 spermatozoa and in some fer-3 spermatozoa. In fer-5 mutant males, spermatozoa do not form. Instead, defective spermatids with crystalline inclusions and abnormal internal laminar membranes accumulate. In fer-6 mutant males, only a few spermatozoa form and these have defective pseudopods. These spermatozoa retain their fibrous bodies, a structure which normally disassembles in the spermatid. The time of appearance of developmental abnormalities in all of these mutants correlates with the temperature-sensitive periods for development of infertility. The observation that each of these mutants has a different and discreet set of morphological defects, a structure which normally disassembles in the spermatid. The time of appearance of developmental abnormalities in all of these mutants correlates with the temperature-sensitive periods for development of infertility. The observation that each of these mutants has a different and discreet set of morphological defects, a structure which normally disassembles in the spermatid. The time of appearance of developmental abnormalities in all of these mutants correlates with the temperature-sensitive periods for development of infertility. The observation that each of these mutants has a different and discreet set of morphological defects shows that the strict sequence of morphogenetic events that occurs during wild-type spermatogenesis cannot arise because each event is dependent on previous events. Instead, spermatozoa, like bacteriophages, must be formed by multiple independent pathways of morphogenesis.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- In vitro activation and behavior of the ameboid sperm of Ascaris suum (Nematoda)Cell and tissue research, 1979
- Spermatogenesis and spermiogenesis inAscaris lumbricoides Var. suumJournal of Morphology, 1977
- SUBSTRUCTURAL ANALYSIS OF THE MICROTUBULE AND ITS POLYMORPHIC FORMS*Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1975
- The mammalian spermatozoonDevelopmental Biology, 1975
- The genetics of Caenorhabditis elegans.1974
- Spermatogenesis in the hologonic testis of the trichuroid nematode, Capillaria hepatica (Bancroft, 1893)Journal of Ultrastructure Research, 1973
- Histochemical and Ultracytochemical Studies of the Spermatids and Sperm of Ascaris lumbricoides var. suum1Biology of Reproduction, 1972
- Cytodifferentiation during spermiogenesis in Rhabditis pellioJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1972
- RNA metabolism of fertilized Ascaris lumbricoides eggs during uterine developmentExperimental Cell Research, 1968
- Morphogenesis of bacteriophage T4 in extracts of mutant-infected cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1966