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. 1977 Apr 20;179(3):347-56.
doi: 10.1007/BF00221105.

On the nurse cell and the spermatozeugma in Littorina sitkana

On the nurse cell and the spermatozeugma in Littorina sitkana

J A Buckland-Nicks et al. Cell Tissue Res. .

Abstract

Nurse cells develop from diploid cells in the testis. Each cell undergoes a reduction division which leaves the nucleus with half the volume of a normal diploid cell. They send out pseudopodia which form desmosome-like junctions with developing spermatids. The nurse cells detach from the testicular wall, their nuclei degenerate and secretion droplets form in the cytoplasm. The pseudopodia are drawn in as the cytoplasmic secretions swell and the nurse cell becomes spherical. The eupyrene sperm become grouped unilaterally and at this stage are attached to the nurse cell by only the tips of their acrosomes. At maturity the nurse cells with their clumps of attached eupyrene sperm (spermatozeugmata) are released from the testis via ducts into the seminal vesicles,where they are stored prior to copulation. Nurse cells serve similar functions to those of apyrene sperm which are common among the Molluscs. We believe that the nurse cell and apyrene sperm are homologous.

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