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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 10, 85-97, Copyright © 1974 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
1 Department of Physiology, Medical College of Ohio, Toledo, Ohio 43614 The origin and distribution of Ca2+-activated ATPase reaction sites were determined
during spermatozoal differentiation and in the liberated sperm within the seminiferous tubule
in the white mouse. In the spermatid, the reaction products first appear in the Golgi
apparatus, inside the centriole during its attachment to the nucleus, in the dense body
and inside the annulus, and later spread into the fibrillar components. During maturation,
dense deposits of reaction products appear in the plasma membrane interfaces between
Sertoli cell and spermatid. As the development of the spermatids proceeds and the
maturing spermatozoa are liberated into the lumen of the seminiferous tubule, the reaction
sites shift to the dense fibers and the fibrillar components. The reaction products appear
as early as the spermatids show signs of contractility; an increasing amount appears with
the later developmental stages and reaches a maximum when the spermatozoa are fully
formed and have cast off their superfluous cytoplasm.
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