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anyone have a picture of a mitochondrion in a gamete?


Genecks

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Anyone have a picture of a mitochondrion in a ovum? :confused:

 

I can't find one. I'd probably have to search for hours/days for a picture of one in some journal. Otherwise, I don't think I know where I could find a picture of a mitochondrion in an ovum. Hence, I tried Google.

 

If you know of a journal article that shows an obvious mitochondrion in a gamete, that will work, too.

Edited by Genecks
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Anyone have a picture of a mitochondrion in a gamete? :confused:

 

I can't find one. I'd probably have to search for hours/days for a picture of one in some journal. Otherwise, I don't think I know where I could find a picture of a mitochondrion in a gamete. Hence, I tried Google.

 

If you know of a journal article that shows an obvious mitochondrion in a gamete, that will work, too.

 

Is this any good?

 

http://cellimages.ascb.org/cdm4/item_viewer.php?CISOROOT=/p4041coll26&CISOPTR=169&CISOBOX=1&REC=3

 

Edit: Here' another: http://www.origin-of-mitochondria.net/?attachment_id=90

Edited by StringJunky
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Yes, well done.

Of course, I'm a fool.

 

I should have stated that I'm trying to find an image a mitochondrion in a mother's gamete, such as an ovum. There is such a thing, right?

 

* note: original post has been edited to say "ovum" instead of "gamete."

Edited by Genecks
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Yes, well done.

Of course, I'm a fool.

 

I should have stated that I'm trying to find an image a mitochondrion in a mother's gamete, such as an ovum. There is such a thing, right?

 

* note: original post has been edited to say "ovum" instead of "gamete."

 

From what i can tell, i don't think there are any mitochodria in the ovum cell itself.

 

http://www.merriam-webster.com/art/med/ovum.htm

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Huh? Of course the ovum has mitochondria. That is why mitochondrial DNA is almost exclusively inherited by the mother.

 

 

You see, that's what I'm reading. Yet I have not found a picture proving such a case.

When I don't seem to have physical evidence proving the fact, I tend to generate fuzzy ideas about what I'm reading.

Got any decent ideas where I can find one, CharonY?

 

p.s.

 

Thanks for the affirmation, CharonY.

Edited by Genecks
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You see, that's what I'm reading. Yet I have not found a picture proving such a case.

When I don't seem to have physical evidence proving the fact, I tend to generate fuzzy ideas about what I'm reading.

Got any decent ideas where I can find one, CharonY?

 

p.s.

 

Thanks for the affirmation, CharonY.

 

Here's a couple of images of mitochondrial DNA

 

http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=http://www.rkm.com.au/CELL/cellimages/Mitochondrial-DNA-2-500.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.rkm.com.au/CELL/mitochondrial-DNA.html&h=500&w=500&sz=70&tbnid=tIsOukN7JIPcyM:&tbnh=130&tbnw=130&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dmitochondrial%2Bdna%2Bimage&hl=en&usg=__qCMJBNDQvDfTYCSQAVfFDuFa9Nk=&ei=JLkvS86xMo334Abdpf2pCA&sa=X&oi=image_result&resnum=1&ct=image&ved=0CBUQ9QEwAA

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Excellent.

Thank you.

 

So, it's safe to assume there is more than one mitochondrion in an ovum cell at one time?

Pg. 17 seems to show miraculously many mitochondria is some static situations.

These mitochondria are marked "m."

 

p.s.

 

How did you go about finding that?

Pubmed, I'm guessing. Any keywords you used to unlock such a document?

Edited by Genecks
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Of course there are more. They require quite some even for energy conservation. Once fertilized they have to grow rapidly. The energy has to come from somewhere.

Searching for it is quite easy. Just look for oocyte and maybe electron microscopy and pick out the oldest article you can find. Nowadays you hardly see basic cell descriptions in papers anymore as they have become common knowledge. The alternative is to open a nice cell biology or cytology book.

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