Fertilization (*** = emphasized points likely to be tested) Flashcards
Sperm structure
Head (with acrosomal region. Head also contains highly condensed chromatin in nucleus.)
Midpiece
Tail
Chromosomes: haploid (22X or 22Y)
What molecule is responsible for keeping chromatin condensed in the nucleus/head of sperm?
***protamine: a specialized histone that tightly wraps DNA by disulfide bonds
Acromosome region
- anterior ½ to 2/3 of the sperm head is called the acrosome region (cap on top of sperm)
- a thin-double layered membrane sac.
- The acrosome contains hydrolytic enzymes
Structure of sperm tail
-***contains 9 axoneme doublets arranged circumferentially around a pair of microtubules (9+2)
-These doublets are surrounded by a mitochondrial sheath (energy to power sperm)
-The tail is responsible for sperm motility
(Impaired cilia in Kartagener syndrome leads to infertility.)
Steps of fertilization
- Ovulation (LH surge) and oviductal collection of the oocytes (via fimbriae)
- Deposition of sperm with sufficient number and motility
- Sperm capacitation (sperm extracted directly from testis WOULD NOT have the ability to fertilize egg. ***Undergoes capacitation in female genital tract).
- Sperm traversing the cumulus oophorus (these are the granulosa cells that have surrounded egg as it matured)
- Sperm interaction with zona pellucida and acrosome reaction
- Sperm penetrate into zona pellucida
- Sperm-oocyte fusion
- Oocyte activation
- Male pronuclei formation
Semen Analysis: which features are evaluated? What are normal values?
Color Viscosity Volume pH Concentration Motility Rate of Progression Morphology
Ejaculate Volume: greater than 2 ml Sperm Concentration: greater than 20 million / ml Sperm Motility: greater than 50% motile Morphology: 14% normal Progression: greater than 50% normal
Sperm capacitation
The process by which spermatozoa acquire the capacity to undergo the acrosome reaction and fertilize eggs.
- see increase in the frequency and amplitude of the flagellar beat of the tail; decrease in progressive movement
- Calcium dependent process and tyrosine kinase driven
Primary oocytes are arrested in which phase?
Prophase of meiosis I
After ovulatory LH signal, what happens to oocytes? after fertilization?
- completion of first meiotic division and yield first polar body and secondary oocyte.
- secondary oocyte arrests in metaphase of meiosis II until fertilization
-after fertilization, oocyte resumes meiosis II and generates second polar body
Where does fertilization normally occur?
ampullary region of Fallopian tube (fimbriae and rhythmic tubal contractions help oocyte get there)
Sperm egg interaction
- sperm burrows through cumulus layer (extracellular)
- binds to zona pellucida
- acrosome reaction
- sperm fuses with zona
Zona pellucida structure
Shell-like structure that surrounds oocytes
- glycoprotein sheet, several microns thick
- 70% protein, 20% hexose, 3% sialic acid, 2% sulphate
- Composed of three glycoproteins: ZP1, ZP2, ZP3
Where does sperm binding occur on the zona pellucida?
***ZP3
Acrosome reaction
Outer membrane of the acrosome fuses with the plasma membrane of the sperm, exposing the contents of the acrosome, mainly hyaluronidase and acrosin (digest through zona)
Involve G proteins, voltage-sensitive Ca+2 channels, and intracellular Ca+2 and pH
Sperm-oocyte fusion: which components fuse? which protein is responsible for fusion?
- Occurs between the sperm’s plasma membrane in the postacromosomal region and the oolemma
- Fertilin: sperm protein responsible for sperm-oocyte fusion