{"title":"利用显微计算机辅助精子分析系统对苔类植物精子运动特性进行动力学分析","authors":"T. Furuichi, K. Matsuura","doi":"10.2525/ECB.54.45","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Embryophytes (bryophytes and ferns) perform both parthenogenesis and sexual reproduction in their life cycle, and sperms are used for their sexual reproduction, in place of pollens in higher plants (Renzaglia et al., 2000; Renzaglia and Garbary, 2001). Because sperm motility is one of the most important features for the fertility in human and animals, percentage of motility and the kinetic parameters for swimming and the guidance to eggs (known as taxis) are well focused in the field of reproductive biology to evaluate and improve the male infertility. However, the nature of plant sperms is rarely known even more than centuries has passed since the first description on the discharge of samen from embryophytes by Schmidel in 1747 (as note by Mirbel, 1835a; 1835b; Thuret, 1851; Cavers, 1903; 1904; see also recent review by Araki, 2012). The discovery of a freely swimming sperm in Ginkgo biloba at the end of the nineteenth century by Sakugoro Hirase was one of the most significant moments in botany (Ridge et al., 1997). In the end of nineteenth century, the freely swimming sperms in embryophytes, thus motile under microscopes, were first identified in Ginkgo biloba (Hirase, 1896a; 1896b) and Cycas revoluta (Ikeno, 1896; 1897; Ikeno and Hirase, 1897), nowadays known as members of sperm-generating plant species. As the first step in fertilization mechanism in bryophytes, semen enriched with the biflagellated sperms are discharged from the antheridia of males as the top of antheridial receptacle are wet by the rain drops (Carothers and Kreitner, 1967; 1968, Shimomura, 2012). Discharge of semen is promoted by a droplet of water but not by touch, indicating that swelling rather than mechanical stimuli, and some following signal transduction might be playing key role(s) in the process. For the opening of covering jacket of an antheridium and distending of the antheridium wall cells which give a pressure to discharge sperms, swelling of the cells and mucus are supposed to be important (Renzaglia et al., 2000; Shimomura, 2012), which is different from the motive contraction of alveoli of human breast for lactation, which initiated by baby’s suck, a mechanical stress. A recent study on the “airborne” sperms of C. conicum indicated that liverwort sperms are discharged as pre-motile form, then shift to the motile form when they swell or they are subjected to hypo-osmotic stress (Shimomura et al., 2008). Thus, swelling and/or hypoosmotic stress, but not mechanical stress may distinctly play key roles in the phases of sperm discharge and transition to motile form in liverwort sperms. In general, swimming ability is one of the most important features of sperms because they must reach and fertil-","PeriodicalId":11762,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Control in Biology","volume":"8 1","pages":"45-49"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Kinetic Analysis on the Motility of Liverwort Sperms Using a Microscopic Computer-Assisted Sperm Analyzing System\",\"authors\":\"T. Furuichi, K. Matsuura\",\"doi\":\"10.2525/ECB.54.45\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Embryophytes (bryophytes and ferns) perform both parthenogenesis and sexual reproduction in their life cycle, and sperms are used for their sexual reproduction, in place of pollens in higher plants (Renzaglia et al., 2000; Renzaglia and Garbary, 2001). Because sperm motility is one of the most important features for the fertility in human and animals, percentage of motility and the kinetic parameters for swimming and the guidance to eggs (known as taxis) are well focused in the field of reproductive biology to evaluate and improve the male infertility. However, the nature of plant sperms is rarely known even more than centuries has passed since the first description on the discharge of samen from embryophytes by Schmidel in 1747 (as note by Mirbel, 1835a; 1835b; Thuret, 1851; Cavers, 1903; 1904; see also recent review by Araki, 2012). The discovery of a freely swimming sperm in Ginkgo biloba at the end of the nineteenth century by Sakugoro Hirase was one of the most significant moments in botany (Ridge et al., 1997). In the end of nineteenth century, the freely swimming sperms in embryophytes, thus motile under microscopes, were first identified in Ginkgo biloba (Hirase, 1896a; 1896b) and Cycas revoluta (Ikeno, 1896; 1897; Ikeno and Hirase, 1897), nowadays known as members of sperm-generating plant species. As the first step in fertilization mechanism in bryophytes, semen enriched with the biflagellated sperms are discharged from the antheridia of males as the top of antheridial receptacle are wet by the rain drops (Carothers and Kreitner, 1967; 1968, Shimomura, 2012). Discharge of semen is promoted by a droplet of water but not by touch, indicating that swelling rather than mechanical stimuli, and some following signal transduction might be playing key role(s) in the process. For the opening of covering jacket of an antheridium and distending of the antheridium wall cells which give a pressure to discharge sperms, swelling of the cells and mucus are supposed to be important (Renzaglia et al., 2000; Shimomura, 2012), which is different from the motive contraction of alveoli of human breast for lactation, which initiated by baby’s suck, a mechanical stress. A recent study on the “airborne” sperms of C. conicum indicated that liverwort sperms are discharged as pre-motile form, then shift to the motile form when they swell or they are subjected to hypo-osmotic stress (Shimomura et al., 2008). Thus, swelling and/or hypoosmotic stress, but not mechanical stress may distinctly play key roles in the phases of sperm discharge and transition to motile form in liverwort sperms. In general, swimming ability is one of the most important features of sperms because they must reach and fertil-\",\"PeriodicalId\":11762,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Environmental Control in Biology\",\"volume\":\"8 1\",\"pages\":\"45-49\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2016-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"5\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Environmental Control in Biology\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.2525/ECB.54.45\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"Agricultural and Biological Sciences\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental Control in Biology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2525/ECB.54.45","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5
摘要
胚胎植物(苔藓植物和蕨类植物)在其生命周期中进行孤雌生殖和有性生殖,精子用于有性生殖,代替高等植物的花粉(Renzaglia et al., 2000;Renzaglia and Garbary, 2001)。由于精子活力是人类和动物生育能力的重要特征之一,精子活力百分比和游动动力学参数以及对卵子的引导(称为的士)是生殖生物学领域评价和改善男性不育症的重点。然而,自1747年schmidl首次描述从胚胎中排出精液以来,人们对植物精子的性质知之甚少(如Mirbel, 1835a;1835 b;Thuret, 1851;凯弗斯,1903;1904;参见Araki 2012年的最新评论)。19世纪末,平濑Sakugoro Hirase在银杏叶中发现了一种自由游动的精子,这是植物学上最重要的时刻之一(Ridge et al., 1997)。19世纪末,在银杏(Ginkgo biloba)中首次发现了胚胎植物中自由游动的精子,在显微镜下可运动(Hirase, 1896a;1896b)和苏铁(池野,1896;1897;Ikeno和Hirase, 1897),现在被认为是产生精子的植物物种的成员。作为苔藓植物受精机制的第一步,由于雨水湿润了雄虫的生殖道顶端,富含双鞭毛精子的精液从生殖道排出(Carothers and Kreitner, 1967;1968, Shimomura, 2012)。精液的排出是由一滴水促进的,而不是通过触摸,这表明肿胀而不是机械刺激,并且一些后续的信号转导可能在这个过程中起关键作用。对于打开包膜和扩张给精子施加压力的精子壁细胞来说,细胞和粘液的膨胀应该是重要的(Renzaglia et al., 2000;Shimomura, 2012),它不同于人类乳房的肺泡在哺乳时的动力收缩,后者是由婴儿吸吮引起的,是一种机械应力。最近一项关于C. conicum“空气传播”精子的研究表明,肝草精子以前运动形式排出,然后当它们膨胀或受到低渗透胁迫时转向运动形式(Shimomura et al., 2008)。因此,肿胀和/或低渗应激,而不是机械应激,可能在肝植物精子放电和向运动形态转变的过程中发挥关键作用。一般来说,游动能力是精子最重要的特征之一,因为它们必须到达并受精
Kinetic Analysis on the Motility of Liverwort Sperms Using a Microscopic Computer-Assisted Sperm Analyzing System
Embryophytes (bryophytes and ferns) perform both parthenogenesis and sexual reproduction in their life cycle, and sperms are used for their sexual reproduction, in place of pollens in higher plants (Renzaglia et al., 2000; Renzaglia and Garbary, 2001). Because sperm motility is one of the most important features for the fertility in human and animals, percentage of motility and the kinetic parameters for swimming and the guidance to eggs (known as taxis) are well focused in the field of reproductive biology to evaluate and improve the male infertility. However, the nature of plant sperms is rarely known even more than centuries has passed since the first description on the discharge of samen from embryophytes by Schmidel in 1747 (as note by Mirbel, 1835a; 1835b; Thuret, 1851; Cavers, 1903; 1904; see also recent review by Araki, 2012). The discovery of a freely swimming sperm in Ginkgo biloba at the end of the nineteenth century by Sakugoro Hirase was one of the most significant moments in botany (Ridge et al., 1997). In the end of nineteenth century, the freely swimming sperms in embryophytes, thus motile under microscopes, were first identified in Ginkgo biloba (Hirase, 1896a; 1896b) and Cycas revoluta (Ikeno, 1896; 1897; Ikeno and Hirase, 1897), nowadays known as members of sperm-generating plant species. As the first step in fertilization mechanism in bryophytes, semen enriched with the biflagellated sperms are discharged from the antheridia of males as the top of antheridial receptacle are wet by the rain drops (Carothers and Kreitner, 1967; 1968, Shimomura, 2012). Discharge of semen is promoted by a droplet of water but not by touch, indicating that swelling rather than mechanical stimuli, and some following signal transduction might be playing key role(s) in the process. For the opening of covering jacket of an antheridium and distending of the antheridium wall cells which give a pressure to discharge sperms, swelling of the cells and mucus are supposed to be important (Renzaglia et al., 2000; Shimomura, 2012), which is different from the motive contraction of alveoli of human breast for lactation, which initiated by baby’s suck, a mechanical stress. A recent study on the “airborne” sperms of C. conicum indicated that liverwort sperms are discharged as pre-motile form, then shift to the motile form when they swell or they are subjected to hypo-osmotic stress (Shimomura et al., 2008). Thus, swelling and/or hypoosmotic stress, but not mechanical stress may distinctly play key roles in the phases of sperm discharge and transition to motile form in liverwort sperms. In general, swimming ability is one of the most important features of sperms because they must reach and fertil-