Gametogenesis and fertilisation! Flashcards

(49 cards)

1
Q

What are primordial germ cells (PGCs) and their role?

A

PGCs are the precursors of gametes. They are called this when the stem cells migrate (but when in gonad e.g testes, they’re called spermatogonia)

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2
Q

How does meiosis contribute to gametogenesis?

A

Meiosis reduces chromosome number by half and introduces genetic variability. MI separates homologous chromosomes (crossing over of chiasmata occurs); MII separates chromatids.

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3
Q

What is the main difference in the timing of meiosis in spermatogenesis vs. oogenesis?

A

In spermatogenesis, meiosis occurs before differentiation; in oogenesis, it occurs after differentiation.

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4
Q

What is the outcome of spermatogenesis from one primary spermatocyte?

A

Four haploid spermatozoa.

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5
Q

What is spermiogenesis?

A

The process by which spermatids differentiate into mature spermatozoa, involving acrosome formation, flagellum development, cytoplasm removal, and nuclear condensation.

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6
Q

What structures are in the sperm tail that aid motility?

A

The axoneme with a 9+2 microtubule structure powered by dynein and ATP hydrolysis.

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7
Q

What is the acrosome and what does it contain? What does it develop from?

A

A cap-like structure derived from the Golgi that contains enzymes like acrosin, β-N-acetylglucosaminidase, and phospholipase C to digest egg coverings.

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8
Q

How many gametes are produced from one primary oocyte?

A

One ovum and two polar bodies.

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9
Q

When is meiosis I completed in oogenesis?

A

At ovulation.

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10
Q

When is meiosis II completed in oogenesis?

A

After fertilisation.

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11
Q

What features make the egg a specialized cell?

A

Contains yolk, ribosomes, mRNAs, morphogenetic factors, UV-protective enzymes, and an extracellular coat (zona pellucida).

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12
Q

What glycoproteins make up the zona pellucida?

A

ZP1, ZP2, and ZP3.

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13
Q

What is the function of ZP3?

A

It acts as the sperm receptor, determining species specificity via its O-linked polysaccharide.

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14
Q

What is the cortical reaction?

A

Exocytosis of cortical granules triggered by Ca²⁺, leading to modification of the zona pellucida to block polyspermy.

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15
Q

What molecules mediate sperm-oocyte membrane fusion?

A

Sperm protein Izumo binds to oocyte protein Juno, recruiting CD9 for membrane fusion.

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16
Q

What triggers calcium release in the oocyte during fertilisation?

A

Sperm entry triggers calcium release from the egg’s ER, initiating egg activation and development.

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17
Q

What happens after the sperm enters the oocyte?

A

The oocyte completes meiosis II, forming the definitive oocyte and second polar body.

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18
Q

What is the role of the sperm centriole after fertilisation?

A

It forms a centrosome that organizes the sperm aster for the first mitotic spindle.

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19
Q

What are the 10 steps of fertilisation in order?

A

1) Penetration of cumulus cells,
2) Binding to zona pellucida (ZP3),
3) Acrosomal exocytosis,
4) Passage through zona,
5) Membrane fusion (Izumo-Juno),
6) Ca²⁺ spiking,
7) Cortical granule release,
8) ZP modification,
9) Pronuclear DNA replication,
10) Mitotic spindle formation.

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20
Q

What do the sperm and egg contribute to the zygote?

A

Sperm: haploid genome + centriole. Egg: haploid genome + mitochondria + mRNAs + proteins for early development.

21
Q

What are the three key outcomes of fertilisation?

A

Restoration of diploidy, sex determination (XX or XY), and initiation of cleavage.

22
Q

Where do PGCs originate?

A

They originate in the extra-embryonic tissue, migrate via the gut into the genital ridge, multiply by mitosis, and later enter meiosis to become gametes.

23
Q

Where does spermatogenesis occur?

A

Seminiferous tubules

24
Q

How does the sperm flagella bend?

A

Dynein uses the energy of ATP hydrolysis to slide the MTs past one another

25
Briefly state the 5 spermatogenesis steps
PGCs → Spermatogonia: Divide by mitosis. Spermatogonia → Primary spermatocytes (diploid). undergo meiosis 1 Primary spermatocytes → 2 Secondary spermatocytes (undergo Meiosis II). → 4 Spermatids (haploid). → Spermatozoa (mature sperm through spermiogenesis).
26
What is the acrosomal reaction? Describe how it happens
GalT-ZP3 crosslinking causes GalT proteins to cluster, triggering G protein activation. The change in membrane potential opens voltage-gated calcium channels, increasing intracellular Ca2+. Calcium-mediated exocytosis of the acrosomal vesicle is initiated: the acrosomal reaction
27
What allows the sperm and oocyte plasma membranes to fuse?
Sperm Izumo binds oocyte Juno, recruiting oocyte CD9, causing the plasma membranes to fuse, and the sperm enters the oocyte
28
What does the calcium wave in the oocyte trigger?
1. The cortical reaction 2. Completion of meiosis II
29
What is the cortical reaction?
The egg releases enzymes from cortical granules. These enzymes harden the zona pellucida and remove carbohydrate from ZP3, so no other sperm can enter. This blocks polyspermy
30
Where are sperm germ cells made and where do they move to?
Made outside gonad (testes) and move into gonad, give rise to gametes
31
what do cells need to have to become a germ cell?
Germ cell determinants
32
What is the genital ridge? What does it form?
GiveS rise to somatic cells of gonads, can form testes or ovaries which germ cells have to migrate into (via gut and into genital ridge)
33
What do PGCs divide by as they migrate?
Mitosis
34
What do PGCs divide by to produce gametes?
Meiosis
35
Can meiosis be paused?
Yes and cell can stay like that for years before meiotic division carries on
36
What are spermatogonia called when they divide and the daughter cells enter meiosis?
Spermatocytes
37
What is the spermatic ridge? What are the cells then called?
Linking between four spermatocytes after meiosis --> they're then called spermatids
38
What do spermatids share?
Cytoplasm- to share gene products of the y chromosome (as some chromatids only have an x chromosome and need y gene products for speriogenesis)
39
Where do PGCs migrate to?
From origin site to genital ridge via gut
40
How do PGCs multiply as they migrate?
By mitosis
41
How do PGCs multiply to produce gametes?
By meiosis
42
Give the steps of PGCs becoming spermatozoa
PGCs -> mitosis into spermatogonia -> mitosis into spermatocytes -> incomplete cytokinesis into syncytia -> differentiation into 4 spermatozoa
43
When do secondary oocytes arrest?
Metaphase II
44
Outline the key points that turn PGCs into an ovum and 2 polar bodies
PGC -> mitosis makes oogonia -> mitosis makes primary oocytes -> STOP in prophase I -> ovulation means meiosis I completes -> secondary oocyte and 1st polar body created, STOP -> fertilisation completes meiosis II -> creates 1 ovum and 2 polar bodies
45
How do we know ZP3 contains the O linked polysaccharide that sperm attaches to?
ZP3 ‘knockout’ mice produce oocytes lacking the zona pellucida, and are therefore infertile Human ZP3 gene ‘knock-in’ rescues zona formation and fertility
46
Where do the cortical granules evolve from?
Golgi apparatus
47
What is the oocyte surrounded by?
cumulus cells from the follicle, in a matrix of hyaluronic acid
48
What activity on the sperm head allows it to penetrate the cumulus cells and hyaluronic acid matrix?
Hyaluronidase activity
49
Give the 10 basic steps of fertilisation
Sperm penetration of the cumulus cell layer Sperm binding to the zona pellucida (ZP3) Exocytosis of the acrosomal vesicle (acrosome reaction) Passage of the sperm through the zona pellucida Fusion of sperm and oocyte membranes (Izumo–Juno interaction) Intracellular calcium spiking Exocytosis of cortical granules Enzymatic modification of the zona pellucida (block to polyspermy) Pronuclear DNA replication Chromosome alignment on a single mitotic spindle
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