精子细胞
轴丝
线粒体
生物
解剖
精子发生
超微结构
细胞生物学
生物物理学
精子
生物化学
遗传学
鞭毛
基因
作者
Hiroki Otani,Osamu Tanaka,Kei‐Ichiro Kasai,Takafumi Yoshioka
标识
DOI:10.1002/ar.1092220106
摘要
Abstract Morphologic changes in the development of the mitochondrial helical sheath in the mouse spermatid tail were examined with the scanning electron microscope (SEM) using the osmium‐DMSO‐osmium method and classified into several stages. During late spermiogenesis, spherical mitochondria gathered around the forming spermatid tail. The shape of these mitochondria gradually changed from spheroid to long and rod‐like. Mitochondria first were arranged in four longitudinal rows (stage 1) that twisted dextrally, and the mitochondria began to stagger (stage 2). They became elongated and arranged into a staggered pattern; they then attached to each other in an end‐to‐end fashion to form a sinistral double helix around the core of the axoneme (stage 3). These end‐to‐end contacts were observed in every second gyre on the four lines surrounding the core of the axoneme at stage 3. Mitochondria further elongated and end‐on touching appeared with every third gyre on the five longitudinal lines that surround the core of the axoneme (stage 4). The direction of the helix, always sinistral, was clearly discernible only in the later stages. Disposition of the mitochondria in the spermatid tail was regular throughout development, which indicates that these mitochondria elongate simultaneously and also at the same rate. On any given cracked surface of the seminiferous tubule, spermatid tails with the same stage of mitochondria predominantly were observed. This ultrastructural finding appears compatible with the histologic synchronism, (termed the “wave”) in differentiating germ cells.
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