Tammar wallaby spermatozoa undergo maturation during transit
through the epididymis. This maturation differs from that seen in
eutherian mammals because in addition to biochemical and functional
maturation there are also major changes in morphology, in particular
formation of the condensed acrosome and reorientation of the sperm
head and tail. Of spermatozoa released from the testes, 83% had a
large immature acrosome. By the time spermatozoa reached the proximal
cauda epididymis 100% of sperm had condensed acrosomes. Similarly 86%
of testicular spermatozoa had immature thumb tack or T shape head-tail
orientation while only 2% retained this immature morphology in the
corpus epididymis. This maturation is very similar to that reported
for the common brush tail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula.
However, morphological maturation occurred earlier in epididymal
transit in the tammar wallaby. By the time spermatozoa had reached the
proximal cauda epididymis no spermatozoa had an immature acrosome and
thumbtack orientation. Associated with acrosomal maturation was an
increase in acrosomal thiols and the formation of disulphides which
presumably account for the unusual stability of the wallaby sperm
acrosome. The development of motility and progressive motility of
tammar wallaby spermatozoa is similar to that of other marsupials and
eutherian mammals. Spermatozoa are immotile in the testes and the
percentage of motile spermatozoa and the strength of their motility
increases during epididymal transit. During passage through the caput
and corpus epididymis, spermatozoa first became weakly motile in the
proximal caput and then increasingly progressively motile through the
corpus epididymis. Tammar wallaby spermatozoa collected from the
proximal cauda epididymis had motility not different from ejaculated
spermatozoa. Ultrastructural studies indicated that acrosomal
condensation involved a complex infolding of the immature acrosome. At
spermiation the acrosome of tammar wallaby spermatozoa was a
relatively large flat or concave disc which projected laterally and
anteriorly beyond the limits of the nucleus. During transit of the
epididymal caput and proximal corpus the lateral projections folded
inwards to form a cup like structure the sides of which eventually met
and fused. The cavity produced by this fusion was lost as the acrosome
condensed to its mature form as a small button-like structure
contained within the depression on the anterior end of the nucleus.
During this process the dorsal surface of the immature acrosome and
its outer acrosomal membrane and overlying plasma membrane were
engulfed into the acrosomal matrix. This means that the dorsal surface
of the acrosomal region of the testicular tammar wallaby sperm head is
a transient structure. The dorsal acrosomal surface of the mature
spermatozoon appears ultrastructurally to be the relocated ventral
surface of the acrosomal projections which previously extended out
beyond the acrosomal depression on the dorsal surface of the nucleus
of the immature spermatozoon.