Birth to puberty Flashcards

1
Q

When do the tesis descend in the bull?

A

3.5-4 months of gestation

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1
Q

When do the stallion testis descend?

A

late pregnancy or a few days after birth

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2
Q

When do the canine testis descend?

A

up to 8 days after birth

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3
Q

Explain the process of testis descent

A

Transabdominal phase - testes lie in retroperitoneal position and are attached caudally to ligamentous gubernaculum
- as fetus grows testes are pushed against peritoneum which causes peritoneal cells to wrap around gubernaculum Inguinal-scrotal phase - the gubernaculum then undergoes a rapid period of expansion, pulling the testes down through the inguinal canal
- the gubernaculum then regresses

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4
Q

What is puberty?

A

a developmental process in which endocrine and morphologic changes transform the animal into an individual capable of reproducing

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5
Q

What stimulates puberty?

A

Secretion of GnRH from the hypothalamus at the appropriate frequency and quantity to stimulate gonadotropin release by the anterior pituitary

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6
Q

What is the difference between the hypothalamus in males and females in relation to puberty and what is the effect of this?

A

Males have no surge centre - post puberty -> small LH surges followed by testosterone
Females have a surge centre - high ampliture preovulatory episodes with basal low amplitude pulsatile episodes between the surges

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7
Q

Why does the female hypothalamus have a surge centre but not the male?

A

Oestrogen complex is too big to cross BBB -> development of surge centre
Testosterone small enough to cross BBB -> converted to oestrogen in brain (via aromatase)

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8
Q

Describe the control of GnRH secretion in females after puberty

A

Tonic centre controls basal levels
Surge centre controls pre-ovulatory surge in GnRH -> pre-ovulatory LH surge

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9
Q

What controls the onset of puberty?

A

GnRH levels from hypothalamus too lovw to stimulate FSH/LH release

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10
Q

Describe GnRH pulses in the pre-puberty female

A

Tonic centre stimulates LH pulses
Low frequency of GnRH pulses - stimulus not enough for LH and FSH release
- oestrodiol secretion by ovarian follicles very low
- below minimum threshold needed to stimulate GnrH neurons in surge centre

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11
Q

What changes in the tonic centre in females at the beginning of puberty and what is the cause of this?

A

Pre-puberty the tonic centre has an inhibitory effect of GnRH and therefore LH/FSH production
This inhibitory effect reduces so oestradiol levels increase and stimualte the surge centre leading to increased GnRH, LH and FSGH production -> puberty

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12
Q

Describe the onset of puberty in the male

A

inhibitory effect of oestradiol/testosterone decreases
GnRH neurones become less sensitive to -ve feedback
Increased GnRH
increased LH/FSH
pubert

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13
Q

indices of male puberty onset

A
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14
Q

Why is the amount of fat and body maturation important in the onset of female puberty?

A

GnRH neurones are sensitive to metabolic status
3 main pre-synaptic neurones: glucose sensitive, fatty acid sensitive, leptin sensitive
Leptin, fatty acids and glucose promote activity in ‘kisspeptin neurones’ which produce a hormone that acts on GnRH neurones

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15
Q

What is the kisspeptin signalling pathway?

A

Kisspeptin binds to receptors on GnRH secreting neurones
Kisspeptin neurones express oestrogen receptor
Rising concentrations of oestradiol stimulate HPG axis so it must involve kisspeptin neurones

16
Q

What are some external and social facotrs that affect female puberty?

A

season when animal is born
Photoperiod that animal experiences at puberty
Presence and absence of opposite sex prior to puberty
Density of same sex groups

17
Q

What are some strategies use to advance or delay puberty?

A

Nutrition (high plane of nutrition = early puberty and vice versa)
Hybrid vigour through cross breeding decreases age of puberty
Photoperiod manipulation (change in day length is trigger)
Endocrine - GnRH induction, eCg induction

18
Q
A