Fujii K, Fukumoto M
Division of Cell Function, Institute of Natural Sciences (INS), Nagoya City University, Mizuho-ku, Nagoya, Japan.
J Morphol. 1999 Nov;242(2):101-6. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4687(199911)242:2<101::AID-JMOR3>3.0.CO;2-3.
A fully differentiated spermatozoon of both Ascidia zara and Ascidia gemmata is approximately 35 microM long. It contains a head and a tail lacking a midpiece. The head (approximately 4 microM long for A. zara and 5 microM long for A. gemmata) contains an elongated nucleus and a single mitochondrion that flanks the nucleus. Multiple acrosomal vesicles (three or four in number) are present at the apex of the sperm head in both species. Each vesicle is approximately 50 x 50 x 60 nm, and contains moderately electron-dense material. During spermiogenesis of A. zara, three or four vesicles appear in a blister of an early stage spermatid. These vesicles transform into multiple acrosomal vesicles without fusing with each other. Spermiogenesis and acrosome differentiation are similar in A. gemmata and A. zara. Three types of acrosome differentiation in ascidians are described.