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Identification of Early Oogenetic Cells in the Solitary Ascidians, Ciona savignyi and Ciona intestinalis : An Immunoelectron Microscopic Study
Author(s) -
Okada Toshiaki,
Yamamoto Masamichi
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
development, growth and differentiation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1440-169X
pISSN - 0012-1592
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-169x.1993.00495.x
Subject(s) - ciona intestinalis , biology , meiosis , immunoelectron microscopy , prophase , metamorphosis , ovary , microbiology and biotechnology , botany , antibody , immunology , endocrinology , genetics , gene , larva
We raised monoclonal antibodies against homogenates of ovaries of Ciona intestinalis . We obtained an antibody named GC‐1 which specifically recognized early germ cells in C. intestinalis and C. savignyi . Using GC‐1 as a marker in immunoelectron microscopy, we determined the morphological sequence of early oogenesis in the ovaries of Ciona . In the stratified epithelium composing the wall of the ovarian tubes, the oocytes were identifiable at the early stages of meiotic prophase according to nuclear features such as condensed chromatin with synaptonemal complexes. GC‐1 recognized these early oocytes. We found round cells with large and homogeneous nuclei clustered at the marginal end of the stratified epithelium. We identified these cells as oogonia on the basis of: (1) features of the nucleus, (2) reactivity to GC‐1, and (3) early emergence in the developing ovaries. The oogonia were classified into three types: type A was large (7–9 μm in diameter) and clear, type B was intermediate in size (5–6 μm) and electron‐density, and type C was small (4–5 μm) and dark. In the developing ovaries of juvenile C. intestinalis, type A oogonia appeared first (before 11 days after settlement) and types B and C followed (15 days after settlement). Thus we see that the type A is the oogenetic stem cell, type B is the proliferating oogonium, and type C is the final oogonium just before meiosis. The oocytes appeared 18 days after metamorphosis.

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