The process of spermiogenesis is traditionally divided into four stages: the Golgi phase, the cap phase, formation of the tail, and the maturation stage.
Golgi phase The
spermatids, which up until now have been mostly
radially symmetrical, begin to develop polarity. The head forms at one end, where the
Golgi apparatus creates enzymes that will become the
acrosome. At the other end, it develops a thickened midpiece, where the
mitochondria gather and the distal centriole begins to form an
axoneme. Spermatid
DNA also undergoes packaging, becoming highly condensed. The DNA is first packaged with specific nuclear basic proteins, which are subsequently replaced with
protamines during spermatid elongation. The resultant tightly packed
chromatin is transcriptionally inactive.
Cap/acrosome phase The Golgi apparatus surrounds the condensed nucleus, becoming the
acrosomal cap.
Formation of tail One of the
centrioles of the cell elongates to become the tail of the sperm. A temporary structure called the "manchette" assists in this elongation. During this phase, the developing spermatozoa orient themselves so that their tails point towards the center of the lumen, away from the epithelium.
Maturation phase The excess
cytoplasm, known as
residual body of Regaud, is
phagocytosed by surrounding
Sertoli cells in the
testes. ==Spermiation==