Abstract
Oocytes of Ascaris lumbricoides are attached throughout their development to an axial rachis by means of cytoplasmic bridges, the walls of which are thickened and in which lie many micro-tubules. Oogonia, as well as the rachis in the region of very young oocytes, contain numerous lamellar bodies of unknown function. Development of the oocytes is synchronous. They contain many lipid droplets which appear to arise by coalescence of small vesicles. The largest organelles, excepting the nucleus, are the membrane-bounded refringent granules. During their formation, these granules coalesce with small vesicles, as well as with dense granules which form in the apical cytoplasm. In a late prematuration state the refringent granules are intimately associated with rough endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes. They contain ascaroside esters, and respond strongly to protein stains. Label from absorbed, tritiated ascarosides is deposited only in refrignet granules and lipid droplets. Fertilization immediately stimulates shell formation, in which 3 layers originate from the egg, and a 4th from uterine secretion. The 1st (vitelline) layer appears immediately and beneath it appears a chitinous layer the elements of which are probably synthesized in the dense particulate cytoplasmic cortex. The refringent granules are then extruded from the cytoplasm and coalesce to form the 3rd (ascaroside) layer, in which the 1st polar body is often enclosed. Meanwhile, uterine cells secrete material which adheres to the outer surface of the egg, forming the 4th layer. The fine structure of the uterine cells is that of typical secretory cells.