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Journal ArticleDOI

The ultrastructure of the spermatheca in the red spotted newt

James Norman Dent
- 01 Dec 1970 - 
- Vol. 132, Iss: 4, pp 397-423
TLDR
Each outpocketing, or tubule, when studied in thin section with the electron microscope showed a wall consisting of two components, a continuous inner or lining layer of epithelial cells and an outer covering layer of myoepithelial cells.
Abstract
Sperm from the male spermatophore in the red spotted newt are held indefinitely in convoluted, tubular outpocketings of the female cloaca called, collectively, a spermatheca. Each outpocketing, or tubule, when studied in thin section with the electron microscope showed a wall consisting of two components, a continuous inner or lining layer of epithelial cells and an outer covering layer of myoepithelial cells. The myoepithelial layer is penetrated by occasional openings or intercellular spaces through which the epithelial cells make contact with a basal lamina that bounds the tubule. The myoepithelial cells resemble smooth muscle cells displaying filaments (mean diameter = 75 A ± 1 S.E.) that are probably constituted of actin, dense bodies and prominent caveolae. They are sparsely supplied with mitochondria, ribosomes, Golgi complexes and, sometimes, particles of glycogen. Typically the epithelial cells contain secretion granules, numerous mitochondria and ribosomes. They contain some fibers similar to those of the myoepithelial cells but with mean diameters that are significantly larger (90 A ± 2 S.E.). Occasional profiles of Golgi complexes are evident and glycogen particles are abundant throughout the cytosomes of spermathecal tubules from adult animals bearing sperm. Secretory granules and glycogen are extremely rare or lacking in the spermathecae of efts that have not attained sexual maturity and in animals with ablated or involuted ovaries. In such animals large electron-lucid vesicles appear at or near luminal borders. Glycogen is absent and secretory granules show signs of dissolution in the spermathecal cells of gravid females induced to ovulate by the injection of chorionic gonadotropin. It is indicated that the epithelial cells provide nourishment for the sperm while they are retained within the spermathecal tubules, that the discharge of sperm from the spermatheca is facilitated by the contraction of the myoepithelial cells and that gonadal hormones act in the regulation of spermathecal function.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of motility in sperm of the red-spotted newt.

TL;DR: Data indicate a major role for osmolality in the enforced quiescence of sperm during storage and demonstrate that the low osmalality of pond water is primarily responsible for the activation of sperm in the spermatophore of the newt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transport of sperm within the cloaca of the female red-spotted newt.

TL;DR: It is argued that passive and active mechanisms of sperm transport work in concert, and contractions of smooth muscle probably serve to draw sperm passively into the cloaca and up to and beyond the apertures of spermathecal tubules, but sperm, once in the vicinity of those aperture, probably swim actively into them.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ultrastructure of secretion in the spermatheca of the salamander, Manculus quadridigitatus (Holbrook)

TL;DR: The storage tubules of mature salamanders appear to be a complete complex of varying epithelial cells specifically designed to support viable sperm and to resorb non-functional forms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sperm aggregations in female Agkistrodon piscivorus (Reptilia:Squamata): a histological and ultrastructural investigation.

TL;DR: The data presented here support the hypothesis that infundibular sperm storage is the mode that snakes utilize to sequester viable sperm until ovulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spermiophagy by the spermathecal epithelium of the salamander Eurycea cirrigera

TL;DR: The spermathecae of Eurycea cirrigera are exocrine glands in the cloaca that secrete a substance that bathes sperm stored in the lumen after mating and prior to oviposition.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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