Volume 263, Issue 3 pp. 323-329
Reproductive Biology
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Sexually differentiated mechanisms of sterility in interspecific hybrids between Oryzias latipes and O. curvinotus

Satoshi Hamaguchi

Satoshi Hamaguchi

Department of Biology, College of General Education, Niigata University, Niigata 950-21, Japan

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Mitsuru Sakaizumi

Mitsuru Sakaizumi

Department of Experimental Animal Science, The Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, Tokyo 113, Japan

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First published: 1 September 1992
Citations: 49

Abstract

Fertility of interspecific hybrids between Oryzias latipes and O. curvinotus was examined. F1 females were able to lay eggs but males were sterile. Histological examination of the ovaries of hybrids revealed that oogenesis does not proceed normally in spite of the apparent fertility. Most oocytes degenerated at the pachytene stage of the meiotic prophase, and only a few entered the diplotene stage to develop into ova. Hybrid males could induce females to spawn eggs, an indication that they had differentiated completely into true males. However, they did not produce fertile sperm. Most germ cells in testes of hybrids passed through almost the entire process of spermatogenesis, but deviations from the normal course of events were observed during spermiogenesis. The condensation of chromatin in spermatids occurred, but the diameters of sperm heads were about 1.5-fold larger than those of normal ones. Prominent abnormalities were apparent in the quantity and arrangement of microtubules in the cytoplasm. Abnormal spermatozoa were phagocytized by Sertoli cells. These observations indicate that the mechanisms of impaired gametogenesis in these interspecific hybrids are sexually differentiated. © 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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