Early ultrastructural changes of developing oocytes in the dog
- PMID: 7241607
- DOI: 10.1002/jmor.1051680206
Early ultrastructural changes of developing oocytes in the dog
Abstract
Many aspects of the developmental stages of the oocytes of the dog resemble those of other mammalian species. The oocytes of the dog, however, contains large amounts of lipid yolk material. A study of the ultrastructural morphology of early growth and maturation of dog oocytes was undertaken to clarify the nature and appearance of this yolk material. The lipid yolk first appears in early primary oocytes as aggregated dense bodies that gradually fill the ooplasm as the oocyte matures. The site of the yolk's initial appearance is consistently related to a single centriole and often to the lamellae of smooth endoplasmic reticulum that surrounds groups of forming lipid yolk bodies. Dense cortical granule-like vesicles are found to lie deep within the maturing oocyte and often are enclosed within the lamellar yolk space. Granules within this space undergo changes in size, matrix configuration, and vacuolization. These changes suggest a mechanism whereby material is added to the lipid yolk bodies. Light microscope histochemistry for lipid and polysaccharide material is described.
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