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New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera)

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Tenebrionoidea, with more than 30,000 described species and 30 currently recognized families, is a superfamily of difficult taxonomy. The aim of this work is to support the basal position of the Mordellidae among the beetle tenebrionoids. They have a low number of sperm cells per cys...

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Autores principales: Dias, Glenda, Mercati, David, Rezende, Paulo Henrique, Lino-Neto, José, Fanciulli, Pietro Paolo, Lupetti, Pietro, Dallai, Romano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9143785/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35621819
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13050485
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author Dias, Glenda
Mercati, David
Rezende, Paulo Henrique
Lino-Neto, José
Fanciulli, Pietro Paolo
Lupetti, Pietro
Dallai, Romano
author_facet Dias, Glenda
Mercati, David
Rezende, Paulo Henrique
Lino-Neto, José
Fanciulli, Pietro Paolo
Lupetti, Pietro
Dallai, Romano
author_sort Dias, Glenda
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Tenebrionoidea, with more than 30,000 described species and 30 currently recognized families, is a superfamily of difficult taxonomy. The aim of this work is to support the basal position of the Mordellidae among the beetle tenebrionoids. They have a low number of sperm cells per cysts, contrary to the more derived families of the group; moreover, their sperm are not distributed in two bundles at the opposite poles of the cysts, as occurs in the higher taxa, but their sperm flagella form a loop in the median region so that sperm nuclei are positioned close to the tail end. The sperm structure of two members of higher families, Oedemeridae and Tenebrionidae, are investigated to confirm the data mentioned above. The sperm looping, which also occurs in the closely related Ripiphoridae, could be the consequence of the growth asynchrony between the cyst size and the sperm length. The Mordellidae sperm are characterized, not by small mitochondrial derivatives and accessory bodies, but by a peculiar stiff and immotile thin flagellar posterior region provided with only accessory tubules. ABSTRACT: The sperm ultrastructure of a few representative species of Tenebrionoidea was studied. Two species belong to the Mordellidae (Mordellistena brevicauda and Hoshihananomia sp.), one species to Oedemeridae (Oedemera nobilis), and one species to Tenebrionidae (Accanthopus velikensis). It is confirmed that Mordellidae are characterized by the lowest number of spermatozoa per cyst (up to 64), a number shared with Ripiphoridae. In contrast, in the two other families, up to 512 spermatozoa per cyst are observed, the same number present, for example, in Tenebrionidae. Also, as in the other more derived families of tenebrionoids studied so far, during spermatogenesis in O. nobilis and A. velikensis, sperm nuclei are regularly distributed in two sets at opposite poles of the cysts. On the contrary, the Mordellidae species do not exhibit this peculiar process. However, during spermiogenesis, the bundles of sperm bend to form a loop in their median region, quite evident in the Hoshihananomia sp., characterized by long sperm. This process, which also occurs in Ripiphoridae, probably enables individuals to produce long sperm without an increase in testicular volume. The sperm looping could be a consequence of the asynchronous growth between cyst size and sperm length. The sperm ultrastructure of the Mordellidae species reveals that they can be differentiated from other Tenebrionoidea based on the shape and size of some sperm components, such as the accessory bodies and the mitochondrial derivatives. They also show an uncommon stiff and immotile posterior flagellar region provided with only accessory tubules. These results contribute to a better knowledge of the phylogenetic relationship of the basal families of the large group of Tenebrionoidea.
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spelling pubmed-91437852022-05-29 New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera) Dias, Glenda Mercati, David Rezende, Paulo Henrique Lino-Neto, José Fanciulli, Pietro Paolo Lupetti, Pietro Dallai, Romano Insects Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Tenebrionoidea, with more than 30,000 described species and 30 currently recognized families, is a superfamily of difficult taxonomy. The aim of this work is to support the basal position of the Mordellidae among the beetle tenebrionoids. They have a low number of sperm cells per cysts, contrary to the more derived families of the group; moreover, their sperm are not distributed in two bundles at the opposite poles of the cysts, as occurs in the higher taxa, but their sperm flagella form a loop in the median region so that sperm nuclei are positioned close to the tail end. The sperm structure of two members of higher families, Oedemeridae and Tenebrionidae, are investigated to confirm the data mentioned above. The sperm looping, which also occurs in the closely related Ripiphoridae, could be the consequence of the growth asynchrony between the cyst size and the sperm length. The Mordellidae sperm are characterized, not by small mitochondrial derivatives and accessory bodies, but by a peculiar stiff and immotile thin flagellar posterior region provided with only accessory tubules. ABSTRACT: The sperm ultrastructure of a few representative species of Tenebrionoidea was studied. Two species belong to the Mordellidae (Mordellistena brevicauda and Hoshihananomia sp.), one species to Oedemeridae (Oedemera nobilis), and one species to Tenebrionidae (Accanthopus velikensis). It is confirmed that Mordellidae are characterized by the lowest number of spermatozoa per cyst (up to 64), a number shared with Ripiphoridae. In contrast, in the two other families, up to 512 spermatozoa per cyst are observed, the same number present, for example, in Tenebrionidae. Also, as in the other more derived families of tenebrionoids studied so far, during spermatogenesis in O. nobilis and A. velikensis, sperm nuclei are regularly distributed in two sets at opposite poles of the cysts. On the contrary, the Mordellidae species do not exhibit this peculiar process. However, during spermiogenesis, the bundles of sperm bend to form a loop in their median region, quite evident in the Hoshihananomia sp., characterized by long sperm. This process, which also occurs in Ripiphoridae, probably enables individuals to produce long sperm without an increase in testicular volume. The sperm looping could be a consequence of the asynchronous growth between cyst size and sperm length. The sperm ultrastructure of the Mordellidae species reveals that they can be differentiated from other Tenebrionoidea based on the shape and size of some sperm components, such as the accessory bodies and the mitochondrial derivatives. They also show an uncommon stiff and immotile posterior flagellar region provided with only accessory tubules. These results contribute to a better knowledge of the phylogenetic relationship of the basal families of the large group of Tenebrionoidea. MDPI 2022-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9143785/ /pubmed/35621819 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13050485 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dias, Glenda
Mercati, David
Rezende, Paulo Henrique
Lino-Neto, José
Fanciulli, Pietro Paolo
Lupetti, Pietro
Dallai, Romano
New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera)
title New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera)
title_full New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera)
title_fullStr New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera)
title_full_unstemmed New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera)
title_short New Findings on the Sperm Structure of Tenebrionoidea (Insecta, Coleoptera)
title_sort new findings on the sperm structure of tenebrionoidea (insecta, coleoptera)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9143785/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35621819
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13050485
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