Observations on Graafian follicles and their oocytes during lactation and after the removal of pouch young in the marsupials Isoodon macrourus and Perameles nasuta
- PMID: 6837478
- DOI: 10.1002/aja.1001660104
Observations on Graafian follicles and their oocytes during lactation and after the removal of pouch young in the marsupials Isoodon macrourus and Perameles nasuta
Abstract
Ovaries from 63 bandicoots (Isoodon macrourus and Perameles nasuta) were collected in order to obtain Graafian follicles close to ovulation for light and electron microscopy. During the first 42 days of lactation (lactation c. 60 days), the follicles were less than 1.0 mm in diameter, whereas from 43 to 52 days, some animals had follicles up to 2.0 mm in diameter, or ovulation had occurred and new corpora lutea were present. This ovulation was associated with the lactation estrus that occurred in some animals. In general, the largest Graafian follicles of the bandicoots were morphologically similar and resembled those of many other mammals. These follicles protruded from the surface of the ovary and revealed a conspicuous theca interna. The granulosa cells exhibited an unusual feature in that they contained masses of glycogen, often associated with lipid droplets and filaments. The oocytes were similar in size (diameter c. 150 microns) to those of some other marsupials and were surrounded by a zona pellucida and cumulus cells attached to the granulosa layer. The cumulus cells did not form a corona radiata as in eutherian mammals. The oocyte nuclei were somewhat flattened, peripherally located and similar in size (c. 40 x 19 microns) to those in other marsupials. These nuclei, which stained lightly with Azure A and were electron-lucent and homogeneous, were unusually irregular in contour. The nuclei were unique in that nucleoli were always absent. Small cytoplasmic bodies which may have been extruded nucleoli were found in the oocytes of I. macrourus, but not in P. nasuta. The cytoplasm in the bandicoot oocytes resembled that of other marsupials and some eutherians in that it was highly vacuolated with most of the organelles concentrated peripherally. Within the central region of the bandicoot oocytes there were crystalloids which were similar to those in oocytes of primordial follicles and in unilaminar blastocysts of I. macrourus.
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