The Physiology of Sea-Urchin Spermatozoa

1952 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-71
Author(s):  
LORD ROTHSCHILD ◽  
K. W. CLELAND

1. Sea-urchin spermatozoa (Echinus esculentus) contain 4·14 mg. phospholipid per 1010 spermatozoa (arithmetic mean of five replicated experiments, standard error 0·06). This amount of phospholipid is about 5·5% of the dry weight of a sea-urchin spermatozoon. 2. The seminal plasma contains very small quantities of phospholipid, about 20 mg./100 ml., less than one-thirtieth the content of fresh semen. 3. When sea-urchin semen was diluted 1:20 with sea water and the spermatozoa incubated aerobically for some 7 hr.at 20°C., phospholipid disappeared. The average disappearance per 1010 spermatozoa was 19·0% (S.E. 2·4), while the corresponding oxygen uptake of the same sperm suspensions during the same time was 1·450 ml. (S.E. 0·118). The oxidation of glycogen or glycogen-like material was found to be entirely insufficient to account for the observed oxygen consumption. 4. Assuming that the combustion of 1 mg. phospholipid requires 1·6 ml. oxygen, the ratio of the theoretical oxygen uptake (associated with the observed disappearance of phospholipid) to the observed oxygen uptake was 0·86 (S.E. 0·04). 5. It is concluded that the oxidative breakdown of phospholipid, located in the middle-piece, is the principal source of the energy required for movement.

1958 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Shaw ◽  
A. Oaks ◽  
D. J. Samborski

Wheat seedlings were grown in sand culture in 1 qt. crocks. Maleic hydrazide (10 mg. per crock per day) prevented flowering and increased the oxygen consumption per unit dry weight of the first leaves by 20 to 50%, but did not alter the C6/C1 ratio, which was measured by incubating leaf disks with glucose-6-C14 and glucose-1-C14. Indoleacetic acid (0.5 mg. per crock per day) increased oxygen uptake by only 10 to 15%, but stimulated flowering and apparently lowered the C6/C1 ratio. The C6/C1 ratio of leaf disks was approximately halved by 2 hours pretreatment with 5.0 and 8.3 p.p.m. of indoleacetic acid, mainly because of a decrease in the recovery of C6.The results are discussed briefly in relation to the effect of obligate parasites in increasing the indoleacetic acid content and in lowering the C6/C1 ratio of susceptible cereal leaves.


1953 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 534-544
Author(s):  
LORD ROTHSCHILD ◽  
H. BARNES

1. The principal inorganic constituents of the unfertilized egg of Paracentrotus lividus have been analysed by chemical methods. The results of the analyses, in millimoles per kg. of water in the eggs (dry weight of eggs, 24%; density, 1.09), were: The figures in brackets are the concentrations of the same substances in Roscoff sea water, chlorinity 19.37‰ in the same units. 2. The total phosphorus content of the eggs was about 2 mg./ml. eggs, somewhat over half of this being acid-soluble phosphorus.


1935 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 217-221
Author(s):  
OTTO LÖWENSTEIN

1. The rate of oxygen uptake was studied in the brackish water amphipod Gammarus chevreuxi in water of different salinities (25 per cent, sea water and sea water). The respiratory rate was found to be approximately 20 per cent, lower in sea water than in 25 per cent, sea water which is a concentration occurring in the natural habitat. Anaesthetised animals showed the same percentage decrease as unanaesthetised animals. 2. The change in oxygen consumption takes place immediately after the transfer and remains constant thereafter. It is completely reversible. 3. A comparison with the unanaesthetised respiratory rates of the related freshwater species G. pulex and marine G. marinus shows that the rate of oxygen consumption of the brackish water form G. chevreuxi in 25 per cent, sea water lies between the two others.


The following paper is concerned with an investigation of the oxidation processes of the animal egg-cell during fertilisation. The subject has already received considerable attention and the problem has been approached from many different aspects. The first to attempt to measure in definitive quantitative manner the oxygen consumption of the egg on fertilisation, was Warburg(1) in 1908. He made use of the sea-urchin Arbacia , and estimated the amount of oxygen that had disappeared from the sea-water in which the eggs had remained for some time. The Winkler titration method was employed. He found that a quantity of eggs that gave a Kjeldahl determination of 28 mgrm. of egg nitrogen, which corresponds roughly to about 4 million eggs, 4—5 c. c. of oxygen was taken up in the first hour following fertilisation, while the same quantity of unfertilised eggs only consumed 0·5-0·7 c. mm. of oxygen in this time. The fertilised egg, therefore, took up six to seven times more oxygen than the unfertilised egg. Loeb had previously predicted, that the main function of the sperm in the process of fertilisation was that of setting up a series of oxidations on its entrance into the cytoplasm of the egg. Warburg’s work was a remarkable confirmation, therefore, of Loeb’s prediction. This first paper was followed up by a long series of papers which have added greatly to our knowledge of the oxidation processes taking place in the egg on fertilisation. In addition, our knowledge has also been greatly extended by the numerous papers of Loeb, and especially the papers of Loeb and Wasteneys (2) in which quantitative measurements were also carried out. In 1911 appeared the large paper of Meyerhof (3) in which the heat liberation was measured and correlated with the oxygen consumption. In all these papers the Winkler method was employed; there are, however, many drawbacks to the use of this method, and in the recent work of Warburg and Meyerhof it has been finally abandoned for the more convenient and accurate manometer. The great advantage of the manometer method lies in the fact that it can be used equally well for both oxygen and carbon dioxide determinations, and that continuous observations can be carried out minute by minute on the respiratory exchange of the material under investigation. Warburg (4) (1915), using this instrument, has recently reinvestigated the respiratory exchange in the egg of the sea-urchin Strongylocentvotus during the first 24 hours of development. He found that a quantity of unfertilised eggs that contained 20 mgrm. of egg nitrogen, which corresponds to about 3 million eggs, consumed in 20 minutes 10-14 c. mm. of oxygen at a temperature 23° C. and barometer 760 mm. Hg. The fertilised egg under the same conditions, 10 minutes after the addition of the sperm, consumed 60-84 c.mm. That is 10 minutes after fertilisation the oxygen consumption of the egg was six times that of the unfertilised egg, and that there was already a rise of 500 per cent, in the oxidation rate of the egg in this time. In the sixth hour the oxygen consumption was twelve times that of the unfertilised egg, at 12 hours it was sixteen times, while at 24 hours it was twenty-two times the amount of the unfertilised egg. As Warburg remarks, it is extraordinary that in one and the same cell substance, which receives no addition of fresh material from any external source, we should find, as the result of fertilisation in the course of 24 hours, a rise in its oxidation rate of something like 2000 per cent. On the whole the manometer method seemed to show that there was a much closer agreement between the increase in the respiratory quotient and the appearance of visible structure in the egg, than had been demonstrated in previous work where the Winkler titration method had been employed. In all instances the CO 2 output of the eggs followed closely the oxygen uptake, the respiratory quotient being in the neighbourhood of 0·9. The respiration of a single spermatozoon was found to be about 1500-2000 times less than that of the egg. In the past season, working at Naples, I have been able to carry the investigation of the problem a step farther, by the use of a special type of the Barcroft differential manometer, in which it was possible to bring about the fertilisation of the eggs in the closed chamber of the apparatus, and so for the first time the measurement of the respiratory exchange during the period the sperm were actually making their way into the egg was rendered possible. The eggs and sperm of Echinus microtuberculatus were used.


Author(s):  
Jose M.F. Babarro ◽  
María José Fernández-Reiriz ◽  
Uxío Labarta

Mussel seed Mytilus galloprovincialis (Bivalvia: Mytilidae) from two origins (rocky shore and collector ropes) was cultivated on a raft in the Ría de Arousa (north-west Spain), from seeding to thinning out, for 226 d (November 1995–July 1996) and two aspects of metabolism, oxygen consumption rate (VO2) and ammonia excretion rate (VNH4-N) were studied in situ.The model derived from multiple analysis of oxygen consumption accounted for 91.9% of the variance, based on dry weight of the mussels and the environmental factors quality of food (organic content) and mainly chlorophyll-a. Seed origin also showed significant influence. The seasonal pattern of the oxygen consumption can be attributed mainly to the variation of chlorophyll-a, which showed a higher range of values in the spring months.Origin of seed did not show a homogeneous effect on oxygen consumption throughout the cultivation period. Collector rope mussels showed higher oxygen consumption values at the beginning of the cultivation period and after the first 15 d, but the rocky shore mussels showed a higher oxygen consumption between days 22 and 110. Energy-conserving patterns and lower condition index at the onset of the experiment for rocky shore mussels could explain these initial differences.Multiple analysis on the variation of ammonia excretion rate provided a model that accounted for 72.6% of the variance based on dry weight of mussels, seed origin and the environmental parameters chlorophyll-a and total particulate matter. The rocky shore mussels showed a significantly higher excretion values for most of the cultivation period, although there was no constant tendency throughout. High excretion values were recorded between January and March, whilst for the rest of the cultivation period values were low.The O:N index was higher in collector rope mussels for most of the cultivation period, which may suggest a more favourable energy metabolism and/or a more appropriate nutritional state for these specimens.


1982 ◽  
Vol 202 (3) ◽  
pp. 661-665 ◽  
Author(s):  
D G Clark ◽  
M Brinkman ◽  
O H Filsell ◽  
S J Lewis ◽  
M N Berry

(Na+ + K+)-dependent ATPase activity, heat production and oxygen consumption were increased by 59%, 62% and 75% respectively in hepatocytes from tri-iodothyronine-treated rats. Ouabain at concentrations of 1 and 10 mM decreased oxygen uptake by 2-8% in hepatocytes from euthyroid rats and by 5-15% in hepatocytes from hyperthyroid animals. Heat output was decreased by 4-9% with the glycoside in isolated liver parenchymal cells from the control animals and by 11% in the cells from the tri-iodothyronine-treated animals. These results do not support the hypothesis that hepatic (Na+ + K+)-ATPase plays a major role in increased heat production in hepatocytes from hyperthyroid rats.


Parasitology ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. E. Rumpus ◽  
C. R. Kennedy

The respiration rates of individual Gammarus pulex infected by larval Pomphorhynchus laevis were investigated with particular reference to the stage of development of the host and parasite and to the water temperature. At 20°C the oxygen consumption of Gammarus of all sizes was reduced by an average of 19·3 % by the presence of cystacanths of the parasite, but was unaffected by the presence of acanthellae. It is considered that the small size of this larval stage, in relation to that of its host, is responsible for the failure to detect an effect. Multiple infections did not exert any greater effect upon host respiration than single cystacanths, nor did it appear that the parasite had different effects upon hosts of different sexes. At 10°C no significant differences were observed between the respiration rates of infected and uninfected gammarids. The parasite was probably still depressing the host respiration rate at this temperature, but the oxygen uptake of G. pulex is so low that the differences between infected and uninfected individuals were too small to be detected. The parasite has a direct effect upon the physiological processes of the host, but neither the mechanism of this nor the reasons for the different effects found in different host-parasite systems are yet understood. Despite the pronounced effect of P. laevis on respiration of individual hosts, its effect upon the oxygen consumption of a natural host population is small since only a small proportion of the population carries infections and water temperatures remain below 10°C for over half the year.


1950 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 396-409
Author(s):  
LORD ROTHSCHILD

1. Spermatozoa and seminal plasma of Echinus esculentus contain catalase. 2. At 15° C., 4 ml. of a suspension of semen diluted with neutral phosphate buffer in the ratio 1:13 produced in 1 min. 90µl. O2 from an H2O2 solution containing 150 µl. O2. The dry weight of semen in the suspension was 45 mg. and the number of spermatozoa 8.55x109. Under the same conditions, seminal plasma obtained by centrifuging semen produced 50 µl. O2 in 1 min. The dry weight of seminal plasma in the suspension was 12 mg. Human blood, dry weight 229.3 mg./ml., must be diluted with phosphate buffer in the ratio 1:1700 to produce the same amount of O2 in 1 min. as the above suspension of semen. If catalatic activity is defined by the equation Ac = (gt)-1 In {a/(a-x)}, where g = weight in g./ml. of the catalase-containing material, t = 1 min., a = initial substrate concentration (H2O2), and x = amount of H2O2 decomposed in 1 min. at 15° C., Ac = 80-100, 150-200 and 6800 respectively for sea-urchin semen, sea-urchin seminal plasma and human blood. 3. The catalatic activity of semen and seminal plasma is strongly inhibited by hydroxylamine. 4. The O2 uptake and motility of sea-urchin spermatozoa is unaffected by M/5000 H2O2. Higher concentrations of H2O2, M/3000-5000, produce a pronounced ‘shock’ effect, from which the spermatozoa often completely recover. 5. Low concentrations of hydroxylamine, M/3000, reduce O2 uptake and motility. 6. Sea-urchin spermatozoa are almost instantly killed by combinations of hydroxylamine and H2O2, at concentrations which are relatively innocuous when the substances are added separately. 7. A rough calculation indicates that a single spermatozoon contains less than 500 molecules of catalase. 8. A new method of adding H2O2 to catalase-containing material in a manometer is described.


1968 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 427-434
Author(s):  
A. E. BRAFIELD

1. The oxygen consumption of the echiuroid Bonellia viridis has been investigated by means of a continuous-flow polarographic respirometer. 2. The general rate of oxygen consumption per unit dry weight is similar to that characteristic of polychaetes, and declines exponentially with increasing body size. 3. The rate of oxygen consumption rises in the light and falls again if darkness is restored. 4. The oxygen consumption of the isolated proboscis plus that of the isolated body region corresponds closely to that of the entire animal. 5. The oxygen consumption per unit dry weight of the proboscis is considerably higher than that of the body region. 6. The oxygen consumption of an isolated body region increases in the presence of light, but that of an isolated proboscis does not. 7. These findings are discussed in relation to the biology of the animal, observed muscular activity, and the occurrence of the pigment bonellin.


1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 175-189
Author(s):  
R. Kuriyama ◽  
G.G. Borisy

Conditions that induce the formation of asters in unfertilized sea-urchin eggs have been investigated. Monasters were formed by treatment of eggs with acidic or basic sea-water, or procaine- or thymol-containing sea-water. A second treatment step, incubation with D2O-containing, ethanol-containing or hypertonic sea-water induced multiple cytasters. The number and size of cytasters varied according to the concentration of agents and duration of the first and second treatments, and also upon the species of eggs and the season in which the eggs were obtained. Generally, a longer second treatment or a higher concentration of the second medium resulted in a higher number of cytasters per egg. Asters were isolated and then examined by light and electron microscopy. Isolated monasters apparently lacked centrioles, whereas cytasters obtained from eggs undergoing the two-step treatment contained one or more centrioles. Up to eight centrioles were seen in a single aster; the centrioles appeared to have been produced during the second incubation. Centrospheres prepared from isolated asters retained the capacity to nucleate the formation of microtubules in vitro as assayed by light and electron microscopy. Many microtubules radiated from the centre of isolated asters, whether they contained centrioles or not. This observation is consistent with many other reports that microtubule-organizing centres need not contain centrioles.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document