Abstract

Ovarian follicle cells are the site of yolk protein synthesis in the Ezo abalone Haliotis discus hannai. In this study, histological observations of ovarian follicle cells were conducted in H. discus hannai by immunocytochemical and in situ hybridization methods focusing on their function of yolk protein synthesis. An antibody raised against purified yolk protein (vitellin, Vn) recognized yolk granules in oocytes, and ovarian follicle cells adjacent to the oocytes under yolk accumulation were stained positively with both anti-Vn antibody and an antisense probe for vitellogenin (the precursor for vitellin, Vtg) mRNA. These results indicate that the abalone Vtg gene is transcribed and translated in the ovarian follicle cells. In oocytes in the early phase of yolk accumulation, positive reactions with the antibody appeared first in the stalk part, and the follicle cells adjacent to the stalk were also stained positively. These observations imply local transport of yolk protein from the follicle cells to the oocyte through an extracellular space around the oocyte stalk. Ovarian follicle cells changed their morphological characteristics and reactivity to the antibody in close relation to the stages of the adjacent oocyte, which suggests the presence of functional interactions between follicle cells and oocytes in the course of yolk protein synthesis and accumulation.

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