Ultrastructural study of the mature egg ofTethya citrinasarà and melone (porifera, demospongiae)
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Gamete Research
- Vol. 16 (3) , 259-265
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mrd.1120160308
Abstract
Tethya citrina is an oviparous demosponge in which eggs are distributed in clumps within the choanosome. The cytoplasm of the mature egg presents a peripheral cortex consisting of a slightly granular layer sandwiched between two densely granular, vesiculated ones. The cortex probably has a specialized, trophic function. Mesohyl bacteria are phagocyted at the egg surface, included in vacuoles, and transferred across the cortical sheath toward the inner cytoplasm. The region of the egg extending between the cortex and the nucleus shows a lacunary system mostly developed beneath the cortical envelope. The noncortical cytoplasm also contains lipid droplets, dense rodlike bodies, and phagosomelike granules. Most of the latter are probably autophagosomes, forming lacunae and supporting autosynthetic vitellogenesis. Rodlike inclusions are probably proteinaceous; they likely originate within the phagosomes and represent the actual yolk material.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Contribution to the study of egg development and derivation inOscarella lobularis(Porifera, Demospongiae)International Journal of Invertebrate Reproduction and Development, 1986
- Origin of male gametes from choanocytes inSpongia officinalis(Porifera, Demospongiae)International Journal of Invertebrate Reproduction and Development, 1984
- Gamete, Embryo, Larval DevelopmentPublished by Springer Nature ,1984
- Reproductive processes in sponges: a critical evaluation of current data and viewsInternational Journal of Invertebrate Reproduction, 1980