Abstract
The lepidopteran primary spermatocytes produce first eupyrene (nucleated) and later apyrene (anucleated) spermatozoa. The shift to apyrene commitment of the spermatocytes is related to an apyrene-spermatogenesis-inducing factor (ASIF) becoming active towards pupation. During diapause, the primary spermatocytes lyse and spermatogenesis ceases. The renewal of the dichotomous spermatogenesis in the testes of post-diapausing, last-instar larvae of the codling moth was studied in vivo and in vitro. In vivo, the post-diapausing larvae resume the two types of spermatogenesis. Since ASIF activity is related to pupation, the earliest apyrene spermatids appear one day before pupation, as in non-diapausing larvae. In vitro, renewal of spermatogenesis occurs if 20-hydroxy-ecdysone is added to the medium, but only eupyrene spermatids occur since the testes are explanted before ASIF activity has started. These spermatids are unreduced and develop directly from primary spermatocytes which do not undergo meiotic divisions. Moreover, only flagella develop in these spermatids and the nuclei remain spherical. Post-diapause resumption of spermatogenesis is thus a complex process in which meiosis-blocking and meiosis-deblocking factors, ecdysteroids, and the ASIF play regulative roles.
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