Abstract

Using an affinity-purified antibody to the major sperm protein (MSP) in Caenorhabditis elegans sperm we have shown by immunofluorescence that the MSP is localized in the fibrous bodies of spermatocytes and early spermatids, in the cytoplasm of late spermatids, and in the pseudopods of spermatozoa. The MSP can also form crystalline inclusions in mutant and wild-type sperm. The function of this protein is still unknown, but its ability to form filaments and its localization in the pseudopod, together with the lack of actin in these sperm suggest that the MSP may be required for amoeboid motility.

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