Abstract

Summary In late previtellogenic oocytes nuage material accumulates in the vicinity of the nucleus and is often seen to be intimately associated with cisternae of endoplasmic reticulum (ER). A similar association observed in Ilyanassa has given rise to the proposition that nuage granules become completely enclosed in an envelope of ER and that this structure is transformed into so-called double-membrane vesicles, organelles which have only been found in eggs of Ilyanassa and Nassarius. This study provides evidence that, in Nassarius, the association of nuage material with ER has a temporary character. At later stages the nuage granules dissociate from the ER, move away from the nucleus, and become surrounded by mitochondria. Eventually they disintegrate. Evidence is presented that double-membrane vesicles originate from cisternae of ER by the accumulation and transformation of material within the lumen of the cisternae. Since only a single membrane is present in these vesicles, and a dense core is consistently found if the appropriate fixation is employed, I suggest that these vesicles be called dense-core vesicles instead of double-membrane vesicles.

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