| Literature DB >> 22131641 |
Menno Schilthuizen1, Bertie-Joan van Heuven.
Abstract
Coiling direction in pulmonate gastropods is determined by a single gene via a maternal effect, which causes cytoskeletal dynamics in the early embryo of dextral gastropods to be the mirror image of the same in sinistral ones. We note that pulmonate gastropod spermatids also go through a helical twisting during their maturation. Moreover, we suspect that the coiling direction of the helical elements of the spermatozoa may affect their behaviour in the female reproductive tract, giving rise to the possibility that sperm chirality plays a role in the maintenance of whole-body chiral dimorphism in the tropical arboreal gastropod Amphidromus inversus (Müller, 1774). For these reasons, we investigated whether there is a relationship between a gastropod's body chirality and the chirality of the spermatozoa it produces. We found that spermatozoa in A. inversus are always dextrally coiled, regardless of the coiling direction of the animal itself. However, a partial review of the literature on sperm morphology in the Pulmonata revealed that chiral dimorphism does exist in certain species, apparently without any relationship with the coiling direction of the body. Though our study shows that body and sperm chirality follows independent developmental pathways, it gives rise to several questions that may be relevant to the understanding of the chirality of spermatid ultrastructure and spermatozoan motility and sexual selection.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22131641 PMCID: PMC3213333 DOI: 10.1007/s00435-011-0140-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zoomorphology ISSN: 0720-213X Impact factor: 1.326
Fig. 1Amphidromus inversus. Sinistral (left) and dextral (right) shell
Fig. 2Amphidromus inversus, spermatozoon and spermatophore. a Nucleus and anterior part of the midpiece (drawn after a scanning electron micrograph), showing the dextral helical elements (all studied spermatozoa, both from dextral-bodied and sinistral-bodied animals, have dextral chirality); b spermatophore with sinistrally-coiled ‘corkscrew’ tip, produced by a sinistral individual; c–d tip of a sinistral (c) and dextral (d) spermatophore, in apical view
Fig. 3Amphidromus inversus, scanning electron micrographs of nuclei of spermatozoa from a dextral-bodied (a) and a sinistral-bodied (b) individual. Both nuclei show a dextral coil