Abstract

In addition to chromosomes and nucleoli, three structures, i.e., round body, coiled body, and nubecula, are encountered in the nucleus during the meiotic prophase in male rats. These structures have been examined by electron microscopy in random and serial sections. The round body is a finely fibrillar, proteinaceous structure closely associated with the granular component of a nucleolus in rat spermatocytes and young spermatids. A similar structure has been observed in man, the monkey Macaca mulatta, the gastropod Achatina fulica, and the insect Locusta migratoria. Together with evidence from the literature, these results support the view that the round body is of general occurrence in the male meiocytes of eukaryotes and may, therefore, play a role in meiosis. The coiled body is a group of electron-dense elements called "coils", which average 35 nm in width, except after mid-pachytene when their size almost doubles. The coils are composed of 2-nm-wide filaments and 8 to 10-nm-wide granules, both of which are ribonucleoprotein. The coiled bodies are interpreted to be groups of "spliceosomes", that is, structures containing heterogeneous RNA and small nuclear RNA. A remarkable feature of the coiled body is its temporary disappearance at early pachytene and its reappearance at late pachytene, possibly due to drastic changes in the turnover rate of its component RNAs. The nubecula is a newly identified nuclear inclusion, composed of weakly staining threads loosely organized into a 560 nm-wide spheroid. It has been observed only in early pachytene nuclei.

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