Comparative sperm ultrastructure of twelve leptodactylid frog species with insights into their phylogenetic relationships

Julio Sérgio Santos, Gisele Orlandi Introíni, Ana Cristina Prado Veiga-Menoncello, Ailin Blasco, Miryan Rivera, Shirlei Maria Recco-Pimentel*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

The spermatozoa of representatives of three Neotropical frog subfamilies, Leiuperinae, Leptodactylinae and Paratelmatobiinae, were observed using Transmission Electron Microscopy, with the aim of identifying ultrastructural traits that provide insights into the phylogenetic relationships among these anurans, which are currently unclear. In the leiuperines, spermatozoa of Physalaemus albifrons, P. cicada, P. deimaticus and P. feioi were characterized by an acrosomal vesicle covering the subacrosomal cone that was not observed in the spermatozoa of Physalaemus centralis and P. cuvieri. The tail of the spermatozoa of P. albifrons, P. centralis, P. cicada, P. cuvieri, P. deimaticus, and P. feioi presented a long undulating membrane, whereas Engystomops petersi and E. freibergi, which form a sister clade to Physalaemus, had an axial fiber, which were absent in Physalaemus. Other leiuperine, E. puyango had an abaxonemal bulb-like swelling distally to the paraxonemal rod, which were also absent in Physalaemus. These differences support the revalidation of Engystomops as a true taxon, distinct from Physalaemus. The tail of the spermatozoa of E. petersi and E. freibergi was similar to that of Paratelmatobius poecilogaster (Paratelmatobiinae). The spermatozoa of Leptodactylus natalenis (Leptodactylinae) had undulating membrane and axial fiber, in contrast with Adenomera marmorata, which lacked these structures. Morphological differences between A. marmorata and L. natalensis sperm cells appeared to validate the allocation of A. marmorata into a genus distinct from Leptodactylus. Overall, dissimilarities in the spermatozoa of the leptodactylids provided an important phylogenetic signal for the understanding of their taxonomic relationships.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-10
Number of pages10
JournalMicron
Volume91
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier Ltd

Funding

This research was financed by the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP, # 2013/04076-1 ), the Brazilian National Science and Technology Development Council (CNPq, # 140391/2012-6 ) and the Federal Coordination for Higher Education Training (CAPES/PROAP). We would like to thank William Pinheiro for the identification and collection of some species, Santiago Ron for the collection of E. puyango specimens, Stenio E. Vittorazzi and Daniel P. Bruschi for their suggestions during the development of this study.

FundersFunder number
Brazilian National Science and Technology Development Council
Federal Coordination for Higher Education Training
PROAP
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo2013/04076-1
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico140391/2012-6

    Keywords

    • Anura
    • Leptodactylidae
    • Sperm structure

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