Spermiogenesis: Sperm Cell Differentiation

 

The process of spermiogenesis . In the left panel a round spermatid begins to extend long thin projections all around its periphery. Soon the projections become fewer, longer, and congregated at one pole of the cell (second panel). Next, the projections begin to fuse and balloon out into a pseudopod (third panel). At right is a fully mature spermatozoon , with knobby projections called filopodia extending from its pseudopod. The cell body (right half of cell) is pockmarked with pores from the fusion of membranous organelles to the plasma membrane.
(scanning electron micrographs by Greg Nelson and Sam Ward)

Spermiogenesis in action

This video shows spermatids undergoing spermiogenesis on a microscope slide in response to a chemical that was added to them. The clock shows elapsed time in minutes:seconds. Note how rapidly the entire transformation proceeds. The spermatid at the upper left fails to activate.

In C. elegans, spermiogenesis is the final maturation of sperm, when the cell builds its pseudopod, acquires the ability to crawl, and becomes capable of fertilizing an oocyte. For a hermaphrodite's own sperm, spermiogenesis begins when the spermatids (the immature undifferentiated cells) arrive in the spermatheca, the chamber in the reproductive tract where fertilization will take place. Spermiogenesis of male spermatids is triggered upon mating. Spermiogenesis is a very rapid process; it only takes about 5 minutes to complete. During spermiogenesis, a set of dramatic cellular rearrangements take place, including plasma membrane flow at the site of the newly forming pseudopod, fusion of mysterious organelles, called membranous organelles, to the plasma membrane of the cell body, and the formation of a dynamic cytoskeleton in the pseudopod from the polymerization of a unique protein called the major sperm protein (msp, pictured at left). Diagram of Major Sperm Protein Remarkably, all of these changes are accomplished without any new gene expression or protein synthesis, since spermatids lack transcription and translation machinery. Our lab has learned how to artificially stimulate C. elegans spermatids to undergo spermiogenesis on a microscope slide by adding various chemicals, so we can directly observe all the processes accompanying spermiogenesis. We also have a collection of mutants defective in various aspects of spermiogenesis. Thus, we see spermiogenesis as an interesting and useful paradigm for learning about cellular differentiation. Some of the questions about spermiogenesis that we are trying to answer are:

 

What triggers spermiogenesis?

How is the MSP cytoskeleton built and regulated?

How does the sperm cell crawl?

What directs the sperm cell toward the oocyte?

 

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Last Modified: September 29, 1998
Paul Muhlrad
pmuhlrad@u.arizona.edu