Abstract
Histological changes in the ovary during periods of yolk deposition suggest that differentiation of the follicular epithelium and oolemma is an essential prerequisite to the pinocytotic uptake of protein into the oocytes. Before vitellogenesis, intercellular spaces form between adjacent follicle cells, and a brush border appears along the oocyte surface. The presence of protein within these spaces and of elementary yolk spheres along the brush border suggests that protein reaches the oocyte by an intercellular route.Accumulation of yolk does not occur after allatectomy or median neurosecretory cell (mNSC) cautery. Allatectomy inhibits the differentiation of the follicle cells and oolemma. In contrast, after mNSC cautery, differentiation occurs but the pinocytotic vesicles pinched off from the oolemma are empty, indicating that the availability of yolk precursors, not the uptake mechanism, has been affected. In addition, the appearance of secretion in the lateral oviducts is prevented by allatectomy, but merely delayed by mNSC cautery. The findings indicate that the corpora allata, but not the mNSC, are the source of a gonadotropin that regulates follicle-cell differentiation and the development of secretion in the lateral oviducts.