Abstract

In the sac-like ovary of the polyplacophoran mollusc, Lepidochitona cinerea, nutritive tissue arises from the ventral gonadal wall of the organ as prominent folds which support the oocytes during the various stages of their development. Each oocyte is enveloped by the follicular epithelium. Approximately twenty follicle cells surround one full-grown oocyte and by this late stage are connected to it and to each other by desmosomes. The follicle cells contain glycogen, Golgi dictyosomes, mitochondria, lipid droplets, numerous cisternae and vesicles of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, and various kinds of lysosomes. The nutritional function of these cells and their possible role forming the oocytic hulls is discussed.

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