Embryogenesis Flashcards

1
Q

What is maternal recognition of pregnancy?

A

process by which an early conceptus signals its presence to the maternal system and prevents the lysis of the CL, thus ensuring a maternal milieu supportive of pregnancy continuation

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2
Q

What causes maternal recognition of pregnancy in cows/small ruminants, sows, mares/camelids, and dogs/cats?

A

COWS and SMALL RUMINANTS - interferon tau

SOWS - estradiol, possibly more

MARES and CAMELIDS - undetermined

DOGS and CATS - no proper mechanism, since length of diestrus will be the same whether they are pregnant or not

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3
Q

How does the fertilized embryo develop as it travels through the reproductive tract?

A
  • INFUNDIBULUM - 4-celled
  • AMPULLA - 16-celled
  • ISTHMUS - morula
  • UTERUS - blastocyst (which undergoes implantation)
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4
Q

What are the 3 layers that develop in the blastocyst inner cell mass? What do they become?

A
  1. ENDODERM - GIT, lungs, endocrine system
  2. MESODERM - muscle, skeleton, cardiovascular system, reproductive system
  3. ECTODERM - nervous system, skin, hair
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5
Q

What is responsible for gonad development in the embryo?

A

migration of primordial germ cells from the yolk sac toward the hindgut to settle at the gonadal/genital ridge

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6
Q

What stimulates male development? How is it different compared to female development?

A

Y CHROMOSOME has sex-determining region Y (SRY), which expresses TDF and SOX9 to stimulate male development (Sertoli cells secrete AMH)

X chromosomes lack an SRY gene = no AMH

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7
Q

How do the genes expressed during male and female development lead to the development of their gonads?

A

MALES = SRY, TDF, and SOX9 expression leads to the development of Sertoli cells that secrete AMH —> degeneration of paramesonephric duct —> leydig cells differentiate and secrete testosterone and ditestosterone (4)

FEMALES = lack of SRY, TDF, and SOX9 expression cause ovaries to develop lacking ADH —> paramesonephric ducts develop to eventually become oviducts, uterus, cervix, and part of the vagina (1)

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8
Q

How does the development of gonads differ in horse embryos?

A

gonads will initially be large early in the course of development and eventually shrink to normal sizes as they reach sexual maturity

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9
Q

What gender are all fetal brains? Describe how the development of gender differs in females and males.

A

female

FEMALES - fetal ovary produces estrogen that is bound to alpha-FP, making it unable to penetrate the BBB, which allows the GnRH surge center to develop

MALES - fetal testis produces testosterone that is not bound to alpha-FP, making it able to penetrate the BBB and be synthesized into estrogen by aromatase, which defeminizes the surge center (GnRH surge center does not develop)

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10
Q

What makes up the placenta?

A

endometrial tissues + fetal membranes

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11
Q

What are the 4 layers of extra-embryonic membranes?

A
  1. yolk sac - only layer that regresses into a remnant sac that can mineralize at the umbilicus
  2. amnion - surrounds fetus
  3. allantois - endodermal lined ventral outpocketing of the hindgut
  4. chorion - exchange of blood and gases between mother and fetus and develops into the fetal aspect of the placenta
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12
Q

What are the 4 types of placental based on gross shape?

A
  1. DIFFUSE - horse, pig, camelids
  2. COTYLEDONARY - bovine, small ruminants
  3. ZONARY - carnivores (dogs, cats)
  4. DISCOID - primates, rodents
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13
Q

What are the 4 major histological classifications of placenta?

A
  1. EPITHELIOCHORIAL - 6 layers makes Ig transfer impossible in horses and pigs
  2. SYNEPITHELIOCHORIAL - sheep, goats, cow
  3. ENDOTHELIOCHORIAL - dog, cat
  4. HEMOCHORIAL - primates, rodents
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14
Q

Histological classifications of placenta:

A
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15
Q

What are some examples of disorders of sex development in domestic species?

A
  • freemartin calves
  • polled gene intersex condition in goats
  • formation of os clitoris in bitches
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16
Q

What description system is preferred for categorizing disorders of sex development?

A

chromosomes affected + presence of SRY + gonads

78, XY, SRY +, testicular DSD = Persistent Mullerian Duct Syndrome, common in Schnauzers, causing males to be able to develop pyometra

17
Q

What is the difference between chimeras, mosaics, and aneuploidy?

A

CHIMERA - organism or tissue that contains at least two different sets of DNA, most often originating from the fusion of different zygotes

MOSAIC - mitotic error in a single zygote, resulting in two or more genetically different sets of cells

ANEUPLOIDY - incorrect number of copies of chromosomes (monosomy, trisomy)

18
Q

What determines normal development of gonads?

A

SRY gene and SOX9 gene

  • presence = male
  • absence = female
  • abnormal = ovotestes
19
Q

What determines the phenotypic appearance of genitalia?

A

testosterone and AMH

  • presence = male genitalia
  • absence = female genitalia
  • abnormal = freemartin