7. gametogenesis, fertilisation Flashcards

1
Q

The ovarian cycle: 1+2

A

the primary oocyte is surrounded by a single layer of follicular cells and together is the PRIMARY FOLLICLE

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2
Q

The ovarian cycle: 3+4

A
  1. at the beginning of each monthly cycle following puberty, 5-12 follicles begin to develop and become GROWING FOLLICLES.
    the follicular cells multiple and become several-layered.
    they become separated from the oocyte by an acellular mucopolysaccharide layer- septum pellucidum
  2. usually all but one of the growing follicles degenerate to form CORPUS ATRETICUM (scar) (replaced by connective tissue)
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3
Q

The ovarian cycle: 5

A

The follicular cells of the growing follicle secrete a fluid- producing fluid-filled antrum.

The ovarian (non-gamete) cells surrounding follicle form thecal layer- divided into vascular theca interna (produces oestrogen) and avascular inactive theca interna

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4
Q

The ovarian cycle: 6

A

MATURE OR GRAAFIAN FOLLICLE: most of cells form stratum granulosum (produces progesteron)

remainder surround oocyte as cumulus oophorus

it is now a SECONDARY OOCYTE

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5
Q

The ovarian cycle: 7 + 8

A
  1. mature follicle ruptures to release the ovum. this retains the covering follicle cells which form corona radiata
    septum pellucium has expanded to form zona pellucida
  2. cells of theca interna and stratum granulosum enlarge
    turn yellow and form CORPUS LUTEUM
    secretes large amounts of progesterone -prepare uterus to receive discharged ovum (and oestrogen)
    prior to ovulation mainly oestrogen
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6
Q

The ovarian cycle: 9+ 10

A
  1. if fertilisation does not occur- corpus luteum has life of 12 days.
    degenerates into CORPUS ALBICANS
    cessation of hormones leads to menstruation
  2. fertilisation: corpus luteum sustained by HCG produced by conceptus and forms large corpus luteum of pregnancy.
    eventually forms large corpus albicans
    continues producing progesterone
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7
Q

what happens to the discharged ovum

A

shed into abdominal cavity
must be caught by fallopian tube
it is outside the reproductive system for a moment

  1. infundibulum
  2. fallopian tube, ampulla
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8
Q

why is the female abdominal cavity a route for infection

A

it communicates with the exterior

vagina-> fallopian tube-> abdominal cavity

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9
Q

issues during discharge of ovum

A

it may not be caught into tube and can end up in abdominal cavity or inside the tube

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10
Q

spermatogenesis

A

mitosis to form stem cells spermatogonium -> primary spermatocyte
during first meiosis: one primary spermatocyte is retained as stem cell then the other undergoes 2nd meiosis to form spermatids to
mature to spermatocytes

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11
Q

fertilisation

A

1% sperm deposited penetrates cervix
reach isthmus- becomes less motile
chemoattractants from cumulus cells on ovulation makes them motile- swim to ampulla- fertilisation
capacitation of sperm cells make them fertile- acromial region loses glycoprotein coat

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12
Q

spermatozoon

A

head: nucleus with large cytoplasmic covering
acrosomal cap derived from golgi- enzymes to penetrate ovum
middle piece: mitochondria helically wound surround central axial bundle of fibrils
axial bundle contains arrangement of 9+2 fibrils continues throughout to tail piece

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13
Q

spermatogenesis vs oogenesis

spermatogenesis

A
mitosis then meiosis in testes
haploid spermatozoa
continuous from puberty 
takes 9 weeks 
motile 
low cytoplasmic: nuclear ratio 
fluid from other glands added prior to ejaculation
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14
Q

spermatogenesis vs oogenesis

oogenesis

A

meiosis in ovaries
haploid ova
discontinuous: all primary oocytes are present at birth, no stem cells retained, held suspended in diplotene stage
5-12 primary oocytes continue with meiosis each monthly cycle, does not complete until fertilisation
non motile
very high cytoplasmic: nuclear ratio

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15
Q

fertilisation: 1. shed secondary oocyte

A

halted through 2nd meiotic division
can see polar body
cells of corona radiata

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16
Q

fertilisation 2. mature ovum

A

penetration by spermatozoon prompts completion of 2nd meiotic division
acrosomal enzymes help disperse corona radiata and aid penetration of zona pellucida
plasma membranes of gametes fuse and nucleus is injected

17
Q

fertilisation: 3. fertilised ovum

A

diploid again
permeability of zona pellcuda altered to prevent further penetration- zona reaction

3 polar bodies: correct no. of chromosomes can be assumed
ovum shrinks
perivitelline space

cytoplasm of ovum is all from mother
mitochondria has different DNA- from mother

18
Q

fertilisation 4. cleavage

A

30h post fertilisation

2 daughter blastomeres formed by normal mitosis

19
Q

fertilisation 5. further cleavage

A

cells continue to cleave to form ball of cells
progressively smaller blastomeres
DNA synth ++ but not much protein made

20
Q

fertilisation 6. Morula

A

cytoplasmic: nuclear ratio fallen to near normal
cytoplasm differentially packaged
zone pellucida persists- prevent implantation
can take a cell away and no difference
16 cells solid ball

21
Q

Blastocyst formation

A

second week
Morula cells undergo compaction- establish tight junctions between cell surface, zp starts to split

5 days post fertilisation- cavity develops and BLASTOCYST is formed
zp breaks down- hatching

beginnings of differentiation of inner cell mass (embryoblast) and trophoblast (cells of outer layer)
fluid filled cavity of blastocyst
polar cells