Abstract

We have determined how many elements are involved in the regulation of self-fertilization in the solitary ascidian, Ciona intestinalis that is an incompletely self-sterile species. Animals collected in the field were repeatedly induced to spawn in order to examine their selfing ratios. About 20% of them were self-fertile, although the ratios fluctuated considerably among respective spawnings. Naturally or acid-induced self-fertile gametes required much longer time for selfing than that for crossing. Egg-suspending seawater (egg water) as such activated sperm motility, but it lowered conspicuously the self-fertilization ratio. Self-sterile spermatozoa could scarcely bind to the vitelline coat (VC) of glycerinated autologous eggs. or in case they bound well to it the sperm flagella ceased to beat within five min of the 'insemination'. The staining of sectioned gametes with DAPI, a fluorescent dye of DNA, showed that in selfing the spermatozoa could hardly penetrate the VC even though they bound well to it. The results of this study show that the block of self-fertilization can be classified into four elements from a phenomenal viewpoint, such as egg water, low affinity of sperm-VC binding, inactivation of bound sperm and difficulty in sperm penetration through the VC.

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