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American Zoologist 1981 21(2):325-343; doi:10.1093/icb/21.2.325
© 1981 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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Cellular and Dynamic Aspects of Oocyte Growth in Teleosts1

ROBIN A. WALLACE and KELLY SELMAN
Biology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37830 and Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543
Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine, University of Florida Gainesville, Florida 32610 and Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543

SYNOPSIS. Four principal stages of oocyte growth are recognized among teleosts. During gonadotropin-independent primary growth, multiple nucleoli form as well as a Balbiani body which eventually disperses throughout the ooplasm. The first gonadotropin-dependent stage involves the formation of yolk vesicles, the precursors to the cortical alveoli. True vitellogenesis follows during which vitellogenin is sequestered from the maternal blood and packaged into yolk granules or spheres. The latter generally fuse centripetally at some time during oocyte growth to give a continuous fluid phase surrounded by a peripheral layer of cytoplasm containing the cortical alveoli. Maturation represents the final stage and is accompanied in many teleosts by water uptake; among marine teleosts with pelagic eggs, most of the final egg volume may be achieved by this process. Ovaries may be synchronous, asynchronous, or group-synchronous. Among the latter, a clutch of oocytes may be recruited from an asynchronous population of earlier stages into any of the subsequent stages. In teleosts which spawn repeatedly, recruitment of new clutches can usually be associated with the transition of a previously recruited clutch from one stage to the next. Teleosts thus offer examples of virtually every conceivable type of ovarian physiology and provide a wealth of experimental material for exploring the cellular and hormonal mechanisms which regulate oocyte recruitment and growth throughout ovarian recrudescence.


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