Lecture 9: Histology and Physiology of the Ovarian Follicle Flashcards

1
Q

Histologically, what are the two parts of the Ovary and what does each part cotain?

A

1) Cortex - houses follicles w/ oogonia
2) Medulla - highly vascular, contains nerves, interstitial cels and lymphatics

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2
Q

What gives rise to more than 80% of cases of ovarian cancer and why?

A

Surface epithelial cells, are highly mitogenic

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3
Q

Explain the 6 steps of Oocyte maturation from a primary oocyte?

A

1) Primary Oocyte (4N DNA)
2) Primordial follicle/Unilaminar primary follicle (arrested at end of meiotic prophase I)
3) Secondary follicle/Multilaminary primary follicle
4) Early Tertiary follicle (Secondary follicle)
5) Graafian follicle
6) Ovulated ovum

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4
Q

Production of a female gamete capable of fertilization by sperm begins where?

A

The fetal ovary

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5
Q

What stage of follicular development is this?

A

Primordial Follicle

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6
Q

What stage of follicular development is this?

A

Primordial Follicle

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7
Q

What stage of follicular development is this?

A

Primordial Follicle

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8
Q

How do Granulosa cells aid in the development and maturation of oocytes?

A

Provide nutrients (AA’s, nucleic acids, and pyruvate)

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9
Q

What is the primary way that Primordial follicles are lost; what do we start with as a woman enters repro. maturity and end with at ovulation?

A
  • Death due to follicular atresia; a small subset of primordial follicles will enter follicular growth in waves
  • Start with 300,000 primordial follicles and end with <500 dominant follicles
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10
Q

Where is the gamete in primordial follicles derived from; what stage is it at; where is the nucleus of the oocyte?

A
  • Oogonia that have entered the 1st meiotic division and now are called 1° oocytes
  • Arrested in prophase I (can remain for 50 years)
  • Nucleus of the oocyte (germinal vesicle) remains intact at this stage
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11
Q

What is the endocrine function of the Primordial follicle?

A

Release paracrine factors ; do not produce ovarian steroid hormones

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12
Q

Label A and B

A

A) Primordial follicles

B) Primary (Unilaminar) follicle

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13
Q

What stage of follicular development is this?

A

Unilaminar (1° in physiology) follicle

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14
Q

What are the histological characterisitcs of a Primary (unilaminar) follicle?

A
  • Central Oocyte
  • Single layer of simple cuboidal follicular (granulosa) cells
  • Zone pellucida separates the oocyte and follicular cells
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15
Q

What are the histological characteristics of a secondary (multilaminar primary) follicle?

A
  • Follicular (granulosa) cells proliferate into a stratified cuboidal epithelium known as the zona granulosa
  • Zone pellucida enlarges and is clearly seen
  • Theca interna
  • Theca externa
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16
Q

What stage of follicular development is this and label A-B?

A
  • Multilaminar primary (2° in physiology) follicle

A) Zona Pellucida

B) Follicular cells = Zona Granulosa

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17
Q

Once a follicle becomes 2° by acquiring several layers of cuboidal granulosa cells what does it secrete and what do these secretions cause?

A
  • Secretes paracrine factors, which induce nearby stromal cells to differentitate into epitheliod thecal cells
  • Fibrous capsule-like Thecal cells are on the outside of the follicle’s basement membrane
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18
Q

Once a thecal layers forms, the follicle is referred to as?

A

Mature preantral follicle

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19
Q

How do 2° follicles get blood supply; what do they release during this time and describe how they move to increase access to blood supply?

A
  • Progression to 2° follicles involves the formation of capillaries and an increase in the vascular supply to developing follicular units
  • Follicle release angiogenic factors that induce the development of 1 or 2 arterioles, generating a vascular wreath around the follicle
  • Movement of the follicle from the outer cortex to the inner cortex, closer to the vasculature of the ovarian medulla
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20
Q

How do preantral (2°) follicles form the Zona Pellucida; what is the function of the Zona Pellucida?

A
  • Oocyte begins to grow and secrete extracellular matrix glycoproteins (ZP1, ZP2, and ZP3) that form the Zona Pellucida
  • Zona Pellucida provides a species-specific binding site for sperm during fertilization
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21
Q

How is contact between granulosa cells and oocyte maintained?

A
  • Cytoplasmic processes penetrate the zona pellucida and form gap junctions at oocyte surface
  • Gap junctions form between adjacent granulosa cells (basis for intercellular communication)
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22
Q

Which receptor does the growing preantral follicle express; what are they dependent on for growth; are they producing ovarian hormones at this stage?

A
  • Express FSH receptors
  • Dependent primarily on paracrine factors from the oocyte to grow
  • Do NOT produce ovarian hormones at this stage
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23
Q

What is the major product of the Thecal cells and what receptor do they express; what is the production of this product like during the preantral follicle stage?

A
  • Major product = androstenedione; express LH receptor
  • Thecal cells do NOT express high levels of 17β-hydroxysteroid dehyrogenase (so only small amounts of testosterone formed)
  • Androstenedione production at this stage is absent or minimal
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24
Q

How does the antrum develop and what phase does this mark?

A
  • Follicular fluid from granulosa cells secretions begin to appear
  • Fluid drops coalesce to form a singular follicular antrun
  • Marks the beginning of the antral phase and gonadotropin dependency
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25
Q

What stage of follicular development is this and label A-D?

A
  • Secondary (3° in physiology) follicle

A) Theca Interna

B) Antrum

C) Zona Granulosa

D) Zone Pellucida

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26
Q

What is a Graffian Follicle; what stage is this; ploidy of the oocyte; and size of the follicular antrum?

A
  • Stage after the first meiotic division has completed but before ovulation
  • Oocyte is now a 2N haploid
  • Follicular antrum reaches maximum size
  • 3 classes of Granulosa Cells
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27
Q

What are the 3 classes of Granulosa Cells seen in the Graffian Follicle; important functions of each?

A

1) Cumulus oophorous
- Anchors oocyte to wall of follicle
- Nutrient delivery channel
2) Mural granulosa cells
- Lining the wall of the follicle
3) Corona radiata
- Granulosa cells firmly anchored to zona pellucida
- Secrecte hyaluronic acid-rich product that aids in fallopian tube uptake

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28
Q

What stage of follicular development is this; label A-D?

A
  • Graffian follicle (preovulatory follicle)

A) Zona Granulosa

B) Zone Pellucida

C) Corona Radiata

D) Antrum

29
Q

Early antral follicles are dependent on what for normal growth; large antral follicle become highly dependent on?

A
  • Early antral follicles are dependent on FSH for normal growth
  • Large antral follicle become highly dependent on FSH for their growth and sustained viability
30
Q

What is the function and location of mural granulosa cells seen in the growing antral follicle?

A
  • Outer wall of the follicle
  • Become highly steroidogenic
  • Remain in the ovary after ovulation to differentiate into the corpus luteum
31
Q

What is the function and location of the Cumulus oophorus and corona radiata in the growing antral follicle?

A
  • Innermost layer (relative to oocyte) of granulosa cells
  • Maintains gap and adhesion junctions with the oocyte
32
Q

What happens to corona radiata cells during ovulation; importance of this event?

A
  • Released from the ovary w/ the oocyte
  • Crucial for the ability of the fimbriated end of the oviduct to grab and move the oocyte along the length of the ovidcut to the site of fertilization
33
Q

Growth during the antral stage causes follicular cells to become responsive to gonadotropins; which hormones do Theca interna and Granulosa cells respond to?

A

Theca Interna = LH

Granulosa = FSH

34
Q

When does the oocyte become competent to complete meiosis I at ovulation; what does it synthesize during this time?

A
  • At the antral stage
  • Synthesizes sufficient amount of cell cycle components (i.e., cyclin-dependent kinase-1 and cyclin B)
35
Q

When do larger antral follicles gain meiotic competence, when do they finish meiosis?

A
  • During the antral stage, but…
  • Maintain meiotic arrest until the midcyle LH surge
36
Q

How is meiotic arrest achieved in larger antral follicles?

A

Elevated levels of cAMP in the mature oocyte

37
Q

Thecal cells of large antral follicles produce significant amounts of?

A

Androstenedione and some testosterone

38
Q

What does FSH binding to its receptor on mural granulosa cells cause?

A
  • Stimulates proliferation of Granulosa cells
  • Induces the expression of CYP19-aromatoase
  • Androgens are converted to estradiol-17β by the Mural Granulosa Cells
39
Q

What hormone do the mural granulosa cells of the large antral follicles produce increasing quanitities of during the early follicular phase?

A

Inhibin B (analagous to Sertoli cells)

40
Q

What do low levels of estrogen and inhibin from mural granulosa cells lead to?

A
  • Exert negative feedback on FSH secretion, thereby contributing to the selection of the follicle with the most FSH-responsive cells
  • Lets us find the follice which is most sensitive to FSH (dominant follicle)
41
Q

How is the dominant follicle selected?

A
  • End of the monthly cycle, several large antral follicles are recruited to begin rapid development
  • As FSH levels decline, the rapidly growing follicles progressively undergo atresia, until one follicle is left
  • The largest follicle with the most FSH receptors (highest sensitivity) of the recruited crop becomes the dominant follicle
  • By midcycle, the dominant follicle becomes a large preovulatory follicle (Graffian follicle)
42
Q

Thecal cells of the dominant follicles express which receptors and produce what?

A
  • LH receptors and produce andorgens
  • Basal LH levels stimulate production of steroidogenic enzymes (3β-HSD, CYP17, CYP11A1), LDL receptors in Thecal cells
43
Q

What happens to the androstenedione and testosterone produced by Thecal cells of the dominant follicle?

A
  • Diffuse from the Thecal cells into the Mural Granulosa cells or can enter the vasculature surrounding the follicle
  • Inside the Mural Granulosa cell the androstenedione will be converted to testosterone or estrone w/ the final product being estradiol-17β
44
Q

Mural granulosa cells of the dominant follicle express which receptor; what are they very sensitive to and what does binding of this hormone cause?

A
  • Express FSH receptors and are very sensitive to FSH
  • FSH up-regulates aromatase gene expression and activity
  • Aromatase converts androstenedione to estrone and testosterone to estradiol-17β
  • FSH also induces the expression of LH receptors in the mural granulosa cells during the 2nd half of the follicular phase
45
Q

What is the improtance of Mural Granulosa cells of the dominant follicle becoming responsive to both FSH and LH?

A
  • Allows these cells to maintain high level of CYP19 (aromatase) in the face of declining FSH levels
  • Acquisition of LH receptors also ensures that mural granulosa cells will respond to the LH surge
46
Q

What is the periovulatory period; how long does it last; what occurs?

A
  • Time from onset of LH surge to ovulation (usually 32-36 hours)
  • Change in the steroidogenic function of the thecal and mural granulosa cells (aka lutenization)
  • Prepares cells for luteinization
  • Formation of corpus luteum
  • Increased production of progesterone
47
Q

What does the follicle do inside the ovary just prior ovulation; what does the LH surge induce?

A
  • Follicle presses against wall of ovary to form bulge called stigma
  • LH surge induces the release of inflammatory cytokines and hydrolytic enzymes from the theca and granulosa cells
  • Lead to the breakdown of the follicle wall, tunica albuginea, and surface epithelium near the stigma
48
Q

What is released once the Cumulus cell-Oocyte complex detaches from the granulosa cell and is freed within the antral cavity; why is this important?

A
  • Released (TGF-β)-related factor, GDF9

- GDF9 stimulates the cumulus cells to secrete hyaluronic acid and other extracellular matrix components, causing expansion of the oocyte complex.

  • Expansion makes it easier for capture by the oviduct and easier for sperm to locate
49
Q

What induces the 1° oocyte to complete meiosis I?

A

LH surge induces release from arrest and completion of meiosis I w/ extrusion of the first polar body

50
Q

Once the 2° oocyte is formed after being released from arrest what does it progress to?

A

Progresses to metaphase II where it arrests again until fertilization

51
Q

What happens to the basal lamina of the mural granulosa cells upon release of the culumus-oocyte complex?

A
  • Basal lamina of mural granulosa is enzymatically degraded
  • Angiogenic factors released to increase blood supply to the new corpus luteum (i.e., VEGF, angiopoietin-2, and bFGF)
  • Increased blood supply to follicle/corpus luteum
52
Q

What does Corpus Hemorrhagicum refer to?

A
  • Blood vessels of the theca interna invade the antrum and basement membrane (basal laimina) breaks down
  • Blood from the theca interna fills the antrum
  • Clotting and fibrosis will occur over the following weeks
53
Q

The LH surge induces shifts in the steroidogenic activity of the mural granulosa cells leading to the luteal phase, causing inhibition of, which leads to a rapid decline in what?

A
  • Inhibits aromatase expression and consquently, estrogen production
  • Rapid decline in estorgen helps to turn off the positive feedback on LH secretion
54
Q

What does the LH surge induce in the granulosa lutein cells and what does this increase during the luteal phase?

A
  • Vascularization of granulosa cells to make cholesterol available for steroid synthesis and increase expression of LDL/HDL receptors
  • Increases expression of proteins and enzymes to produce progesterone
55
Q

What phase is this and how do you know; what is each arrow pointing to?

A
  • Luteal Phase
  • The blood clot has formed
  • Top arrow is at Thecal Cells
  • Bottom arrow is Granulosa Cells
56
Q

The corpus luteum continues to enlarge during the luteal phase and fill with what; what stage does it enter

A

Fills with Cholesterol Esters and enters an involution stage about 14 days after ovulation

57
Q

What does regression of the corpus luteum (luteolysis) lead to?

A
  • Formation of corpus albicans, which is stromal CT replacing degenerating luteal cells
  • Will decrease in size, but seldom dissapears
58
Q

What is seen in this image?

A

Corpus albicans (luteal phase)

59
Q

What is indicated by A and B?

A

A) Theca lutein cells

B) Granulosa lutein cells

60
Q

How long is the corpus luteum programmed to live for; what occurs if fertilization happens?

A
  • Programmed to live for ~14 days
  • If fertilization occurs, will be rescued by hCG and remain viable for the duration of the pregnancy
61
Q

What is progesterone and estrogen production by the corpus luteum production like from the onset of the LH surge?

A
  • Progesterone production by the corpus luteum increases steadily and peaks during the midluteal phase
  • Estrogen production transiently decrease in response to LH surge but then rebounds and also peaks at midluteal phase
  • Progesterone and estrogen levels decline during the 2nd half of the luteal phase unless and increase in circulating hCG compensates for the decreased sensitivity to LH
62
Q

What is the importance of the increased progesterone from the corpus luteum for pregnancy?

A
  • Transforms uterine lining into adhesive and supportive structure
  • Important for implantation and early pregnancy
63
Q

Luteal hormone output is absolutely dependent on what; what is progesterone output closely correlated with?

A

- Basal LH levels

  • Progesterone output is closely correlated to the pulsatile pattern of LH release
64
Q

What happens to FSH and LH levels during the luteal phase and how?

A
  • Both FSH and LH are reduced to basal levels during the luteal phase by the negative feedback from progesterone and estrogen
  • Granulosa lutein cells secrete inhibin A, which further suppresses FSH secretion
65
Q

What is follicular atresia, when does it occur, and which cell populations live and die?

A
  • Demise of an ovarian follicle; can occur at any time during development
  • Predomiant process in the ovary
  • Granulosa cells and oocytes undergo apoptosis
  • Thecal cells persist and repopulate the cellular stroma of the ovary
66
Q

During follicular atresia the Thecal cells survive and retain which receptors and the ability to produce; they are referred to as?

A
  • Retain LH receptors and the ability to produce androgens
  • Collectively are referred to as the interstitial gland of the ovary
67
Q

During follicular atresia the oocyte degenerates and the basement membrane separates from the oocyte and forms?

A

Thickens to become the glassy membrane

68
Q

What is this image of?

A

Corpus Albicans