Reproductive features of the eastern mole (Scalopus aquaticus) and star-nose mole (Condylura cristata)

Autor: Bedford, J. M., Mock, O. B., Nagdas, S. K., Winfrey, V. P., Olson, G. E.
Zdroj: Reproduction; November 1999, Vol. 117 Issue: 2 p345-353, 9p
Abstrakt: Since moles are closely related to shrews, the gametes and reproductive tracts of the star-nose mole (Condylura cristata) and the eastern mole (Scalopus aquaticus) were examined to gain further insight into unusual reproductive traits of the Soricidae. Moles display many of these soricid traits, but with some important differences. The cumulus oophorus of Scalopus, ovulated about 16 h after hCG injection, was largely dispersed by hyaluronidase and, though quite dense, was nevertheless more similar to that of higher mammals than to the compact 'ball' of the soricid cumulus. Within the female tract in these moles, approximately 85% of the length of the oviduct comprises a narrow ampulla with numerous differentiated crypts that, in shrews, house spermatozoa. However, in contrast to shrews, moles produce considerably larger numbers of spermatozoa, which challenges the proposal that, in shrews, oviductal sperm crypts specifically permit lower sperm production by the males. In the sperm head of these two moles, the acrosome displays the long rostrum that is typical of other Insectivora, and the perforatorium has the barbs by which soricid spermatozoa probably bind to the zona pellucida. Perhaps allied to this, immunoblots indicated that the immunoreactive acrosomal matrix of Scalopusspermatozoa is simpler than the polypeptide complex of the bovine and hamster acrosomal matrix.
Databáze: Supplemental Index