Abstract

An electron microscope study of the vitelline follicles of Gorgoderina vitelliloba indicates that they contain vitelline cells in various stages of development. Juvenile cells are small and characterised by a little cytoplasm. During differentiation a large amount of granular endoplasmic reticulum develops. In more mature cells, indistinct Golgi complexes give rise to globules of shell protein which migrate to form clusters at the periphery of the cell. Further maturation results in the appearance of large lipid bodies in the vitelline cell cytoplasm. Developing vitelline cells are ensheathed by nurse cell cytoplasm containing numerous small vacuoles which appear to be derived from smooth endoplasmic reticulum. It is suggested that nurse cells may have a role in selection and transport of nutrient material for vitelline cells and that they manufacture precursors of lipid which is subsequently stored as a food reserve in mature vitelline cells. Possible transport sites between parenchymal cells and nurse cells were identified.

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