Abstract
The site of gamete interaction of electrophysiologically recorded Lytechinus variegatus eggs, fixed with osmium tetroxide (OsO4) and/or glutaraldehyde (GTA) at varying intervals after the onset of the increase in membrane conductance induced by an attached sperm, has been examined by high-voltage and conventional transmission electron microscopy. Although GTA and a GTA-OsO4 mixture induced different electrical responses, specimens prepared with the two fixatives were ultrastructurally similar. In specimens observed within 5 s of the change in conductance, the acrosomal process projected through the vitelline layer and abutted the egg plasma membrane. A conspicuous layer of bindin surrounded the acrosomal process and connected the sperm to the egg's vitelline layer. In a fortuitous specimen fixed within 4 s following the change in conductance, the area of contact between the gamete plasma membranes possessed a trilaminar structure that separated the egg's and sperm's cytoplasms. The morphology of this area of contact was consistent with previously proposed intermediates of membrane fusion. Five to six seconds after the change in conductance, the sperm was connected to the egg via a narrow cytoplasmic bridge that consisted of the former acrosomal process and a projection of the egg cortex. The region of the bridge midway between the fused gametes was encircled by dense material that marked the site of sperm-egg fusion. Gamete interactions in which the activation potential was recorded (unclamped egg) were comparable in time and ultrastructure to events taking place in voltage-clamped eggs except for one major difference. Intact cortical granules (one to three) were observed beneath the tip of the incorporating sperm in unclamped eggs fixed following the onset of the activation potential, whereas all cortical granules dehisced in clamped eggs.
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