Abstract

The developmental changes of Sertoli cells were examined and described in the freshwater pearl mussel Margaritifera laevis using light and transmission electron microscopy. Sertoli cells, which are located on the basal lamina of acini in the testis, include a large number of glycogen granules, electron-dense globules, lipid droplets, and sperm morulae. Electron-dense globules are the vacuoles into which the electron-dense material is condensed. In aging Sertoli cells, the content of the globules leaks out to the extracellular area. Large lipid droplets are formed by the deposition of smaller lipid droplets into a vacuole. After the disruption of the Sertoli cell, the lipid droplets are discharged to the extracellular area and fuse with to form a larger mass. The spermatogonia which were engulfed by the Sertoli cells begin to condense their chromatin and transform themselves into sperm morulae. The constituent cells of the sperm morulae proliferate and finally differentiate into the spermatozoa. After the disruption of the Sertoli cell, the spermatozoa produced from the sperm morulae are released into the acinus lumen. Numerous matured spermatozoa in the acini gather around the large lipid droplet, to form the sperm sphere. The completed sperm spheres are subsequently released through the exhalant siphon into the stream.

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