26-10-21 - Reproductive System Flashcards
What are the arteries and veins that supply/drain the testes?
Where is the penis positioned in relation to the bladder, prostate, and anus?
- Testicular arteries arise from the abdominal aorta, with each teste having its own independent blood supply that is not connected to the others
- The right teste drains into the inferior vena cava
- The left teste drains into the renal vein
- The penis is Inferior to the bladder and prostate
- The penis is anterior to the anus
Where are the testes suspended?
What are they surrounded by?
What is the skin and muscle like here?
How is it divided?
Why are the testes suspended here?
- Each teste is suspended outside the body in the scrotum, and is surrounded by tunica albuginea
- The skin is rugose (crinkled) and contains dartos (smooth muscle)
- The scrotum has a midline raphe, and is the divided by the septum
- The testes are suspended outside of the body in order to keep cool (2-3C below core temperature)
What do the male gonads produce?
What process is this known as?
Where does this process occur?
What are the 2 cells in this structure?
What are they for?
What are they separated by?
- The male gonads produce sperm/gametes via spermatogenesis
- This occurs in the seminiferous tubules
- There are 2 cell types within the seminiferous tubules:
- Leydig cells – site of steroid synthesis and located outside of the basement membrane
- Sertoli cells – nurse cells for sperm, and located within the basement membrane
- The basement membrane divides Leydig cells and capillaries from Sertoli cells
What are the 3 gonadal hormones - men?
What are they produced by?
What is their purpose?
- The 3 gonadal hormones:
1) Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) – produce by anterior pituitary gonadotropic cells – FSH is important for the development of sperm in the seminiferous tubules
2) Luteinizing hormone (LH) - produce by anterior pituitary gonadotropic cells – LH stimulates Leydig cells to produce testosterone
3) Testosterone (steroid) – Produced by Leydig cells – production is regulated by FSH and LH (purpose in later flashcard)
Where does sperm develop and from what?
Describe the 3 steps of spermatogenesis => tight junctions
what does spermatonia develop into
- Sperm cells develop at the basement membrane of seminiferous tubules from progenitor cells called spermatogonium
1) Sertoli cells act as support cells and aid in the development of the sperm. Sertoli cells have tight junctions between them, which are broken down and built up to allow the spermatogonium to make its way from the basement membrane to the lumen of the seminiferous tubule
2) As the spermatogonium moves towards the lumen, they develop, and the tight junctions are sealed up behind them.
3) Once reaching the lumen, the spermatogonia have developed into mature spermatozoa
What is the process of developed sperm being stored?
How is sperm then ejaculated?
What are the 2 accessory organs?
What are their functions?
- After sperm have developed and matured, they then move from the seminiferous tubules into the rete testis
- They then move into the epididymis via efferent ductulus, where they are stored.
This description explains the pathway sperm take during ejaculation. When a man is about to ejaculate, sperm travel from the testicles, through the epididymis, and into the vas deferens. The vas deferens is a tube that carries sperm. As it moves through the body, it passes behind the bladder and connects to the urethra, which is the tube that carries urine and semen out of the body. The prostate gland adds fluids to the sperm to form semen before it is expelled through the urethra during ejaculation. - There are 2 accessory organs called the seminal vesicle and the bulbourethral gland
- These accessory organs add fluid and nutrients to semen, which sperm require to survive and generate the energy needed to move the flagella
What are the 4 stages of sperm before they are spermatozoa?
How long does this whole process take?
What 3 changes occur in the last stage?
What is this process regulated by?
How is this process different from menstruation?
1) Spermatogonia
2) Primary spermatocytes
3) Secondary spermatocytes
4) Spermatids
5) Spermatozoa
- This process takes 72 days
- From spermatids to spermatozoa, the spermatids lose their cytoplasm
- Their DNA is gathered in a specialized area called the head
- Flagella is developed to allow the sperm to move
- This process is regulated by FSH from the anterior pituitary gland and testosterone from the testes
- This process can occur from puberty until death, unlike menstruation, where there is a finite number of ova (plural for egg)
What are the 3 parts of the sperm?
acro
What do they each contain?
- Head
- Acrosome (lysosome-related organelle) that contains proteolytic enzyme (like hyaluronidase and acrosin) that allow the sperm to penetrate the ovum (singular egg)
- The head has a nucleus that contains genetic material which combines with DNA from the female
- Midpiece
- Contains mitochondria around filamentous core
- Provides energy for the tail (engine room of sperm)
- Tail
- Specialised flagellum that propels the sperm forward
Where are the testicular endocrine functions found?
How is testosterone produced?
What can testosterone then do?
What can FSH do?
What can FSH and testosterone do in conjunction with one another?
What can Sertoli cells do in Leydig cells?
=> women + spices
How do they do this?
- Testicular endocrine functions are in the Leydig and Sertoli cells
- Leydig cells have an LH (luteinizing hormone) receptor that when bound, produces testosterone
- Testosterone can diffuse across the basement membrane into Sertoli cells and regulate spermatogenesis
- FSH can also bind to its receptor on Sertoli cells and stimulate spermatogenesis
- Testosterone increase + stimulation of Sertoli cells by FSH leads to an increase in spermatogenesis
- Sertoli cells can regulate gene expression in Leydig cells and reduce testosterone production
- Sertoli cells can use the enzyme aromatase to convert testosterone into oestradiol (type of oestrogen)
- Oestradiol can diffuse back across the basement membrane into Leydig cells and has an inhibiting effect on the production of testosterone
What is GnRH?
Where is it released from in men?
How does it travel?
Where does it go?
What is the function of GnRH in gonadotropic cells in men?
How is the amount of GnRH regulated in men?
What does this impact?
What is this system known as?
What 2 ways does this process differ in males from females?
- GnRH is gonadotropin releasing hormone, which is a peptide hormone
- It is release from particular neurons, such as the preoptic and acuate nucleus of the hypothalamus
- It moves into capillaries of the pituitary stock, and flows from the hypothalamic regions to the anterior pituitary gonadotropes
- GnRH diffuses into these gonadotropic cells, and stimulates them to release LH, which targets Leydig cells to produce testosterone, and FSH, which targets Sertoli cells to produce inhibin B
- Testosterone and Inhibin B have negative feedback mechanisms, so can inhibit anterior pituitary gonadotropic cells and hypothalamic cells in order to regulate GnRH levels
- This impacts LH and FSH levels, which has a direct effect on spermatogenesis.
- This system is known as the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Testicular Axis (HPT)
- In males, there is only 1 primary hormone instead of 2 (testosterone vs oestrogen and progestins)
- In the male system, no role for activins has been established.
1) What physiological effects does testosterone have on: • Bone (1 effect) • Muscle (1 effect) • Reproductive organs (4 effects) • Skin (1 effect)
What is the uterus?
What 2 things is it used for?
How does it sit in relation to the cervix?
How does the uterus sit in relation to the entry of the vagina?
Where does the uterus sit in relation to the small intestine?
- The uterus is a pear-shaped, central pelvic organ for the implantation of a fertilised ovum and growth of a foetus
- The uterus is anteflexed between the cervix and body – displacement forward of an organ so its axis its bent upon itself
- The uterus is anteverted at entry to the vagina – tilted towards the front of the abdomen
- The uterus is anterior to the small intestine
Where are the ovaries suspended?
What are they suspended by?
When does ovulation typically start in the menstruation cycle?
Describe the 5 steps in the process of fertilization.
- The ovaries are suspended in the body cavity on the lateral pelvic wall by the ligament of the ovary
- Ovulation usually occurs 10-16 days before the period starts
1) The ovaries release 1 egg a month (alternates sides each month)
2) The fimbriae generate waves of contraction that catches the egg and gets it into the fallopian tubes
3) The egg moves through fallopian tubes to the ampulla, which is where the sperm will meet the egg and fertilization occurs.
4) The fertilized egg (zygote) continues down the fallopian tube into the uterine cavity, then implants on the uterine wall
5) If implantation is successful, pregnancy develops
What is the female equivalent of the male gonads?
What do they produce?
What is this process called?
Where does this occur in the ovaries?
What releases the egg?
How often does this happen?
What are the cells that make up this structure? FECA
What is the function of these cells?
- The female gonads are called ovaries, and produce oocytes (immature ovum) via oogenesis
- Oogenesis occurs in the follicles as they mature, with the mature egg being released by a mature (graafian) follicle, which occurs monthly.
- Similarly, to seminiferous tubules, follicles consist of Theca cells outside a basement membrane, and Granulosa cells within the basement membrane
- Theca cells outside of the basement membrane – produces androgens
- Granulosa cells inside of the basement membrane – produce steroids oestrogen and progestin
What are the 4 female gonadal hormones?
What are they produced by?
What are their functions?
• The 4 female gonadal hormones:
1) Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) – produce by anterior pituitary gonadotropic cells – FSH is important for the development of follicles
2) Luteinizing hormone (LH) - produce by anterior pituitary gonadotropic cells – LH is important for the production of progestins and oestrogen in granulosa cells
3) Oestrogen and progestins (steroids) – Produced by granulosa cells of follicles – production is regulated by FSH and LH – Bring about the female menstrual cycle