Lecture 15: Sexual Differentiation Flashcards

1
Q
A
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2
Q

What is meant by the ‘bipotential gonads’

A

That we all have the potential to be male or female! Irrespective of your chromosomes.

Bipotential Gonads <6wks

Bipotential Internal genitalia <7wks

Bipotential Eternal Genitalia <8wks

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3
Q

What determines internal and external sexual differentiation?

A

The Testis. Dominant > male

An ovary or NO gonad will result in female internal and external genitalia.

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4
Q

Describe the origin of the bipotential gonad/genital ridge

A
  • Arise as paired structures in intermediate mesoderm
  • Genital ridge area can be divided into 3 (from ant- post)
    • Pronephros (caudal end forms adrenals)
    • Mesonephros (central region forms the gonads and internal reproductive structures; wolffian + mullerian ducts
    • Metanephros (post end forms kidneys)
  • Therefore if you’ve got a defct in your gonads, you could have a defect in your adrenals or your kidneys, look at these structures as a signal of this
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5
Q

4 main genes involved in gonadal development?

A
  1. IGFR1 insulin like growth factor receptor 1
  2. Wilms Tumour 1 (WT1) kidney tumour you get in kids
  3. Steroidigenic Factor 1 (SF1) found in lots of tissues
  4. DAX1

These are all important in getting mesoderm → genital ridge.
From genital ridge you get your ovaries and testis forming

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6
Q

What initiates gonadal determination to either a testis or ovarys?

A
  • Testicular determination* → initiated in most mammals by SRY (sex determining region of Y)
  • Ovarian Initiator* → unknown (maybe FOXL2)
  • Multiple genes are involved in each process
    • earlier + greater gene activation in testicular development
  • More is know about testis formation
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7
Q

Describe and draw out this image (MEMORISE)

A

Ovaries: Driven by FOXL2. Also by Bcatenin**, RSPO1, DAX-1, WnT4
♦ As well as driving ovarian development it inhibits testicular formation

Testis: Driven by SRY (only present for first 24hrs), who’s main job is to activate SOX-9. Also SF-1 and FGF9
♦♦As well as driving Testicular development it inhibits ovarian formation

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9
Q

SRY’s main role is?

A

To stimulate SOX-9

SOX-9: autosomal gene that once stimulate`d completes testicular differentiation

Initial SOX-9 transcription from SF-1
Then hugely upregulated by SRY
Finally upregulates itself via a positive feedback loop and the stimulation of prostaglandin D2 and FGF-9

These ALL inhibit ovarian Transcription Factors also

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13
Q

SRY of the male gonadal determination

A

SRY is the sex determining region of Y, and is the initial gene determining male gonadal development.

Identified in 1991 from XXmales (chromosome been transfered Y→X during recombination)

FOund solely in the pre-Sertoli cell in the testis and activation precedes development of the Sertoli cell (which is already the 1st of testicular cells)

Sertoli Cells: testis ‘regulator cell’ and blood-testis barrier (prevents WBC interacting with sperm and provides nutrients)

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15
Q

Prostaglandin D2 role and origin?

A

Produced from pre-sertoli cells.

Increases SOX-9 in a paracrine manner, (binds to PG receptors on cells)

Recruits further undifferentiated cells → sertoli cell lineage

A cascade effect.

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16
Q

FGF-9

A

FGF-9 is a crucial growth factor for male sex determination, also acts as the earliest mitogen in the XY gonad.

Secreted from pre-Sertoli cells, enhances proliferation of SF-1 positive cells of coelomic epithelium → increased number of precursors of Sry-expressing cells and other gonadal cells

Therefore involves in both sex determination and testis differentiation

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17
Q

Where do primordial germ cells originate?

A

Allantois (yolk sac)

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18
Q

Survival of primordial germ cells in migration is dependent on ____

A

cKIT/Steel factor

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19
Q

In testis germ cells enter ___ and have mitotic arrest In ovaries germ cells continue into early ___ before arresting

A

Cords Meiosis

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20
Q

Which structures does the Wollfian duct differentiate to?

A
  • Epididymis - Vas deferens - Seminal vesicles
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21
Q

Which structures does the Mullerian duct differentiate to?

A
  • Fallopian tubes - Uterus - Upper 1/3 of vagina
22
Q

___ cells produce AMH which causes Mullerian duct regression

A

Sertoli

23
Q

___ cells produce testosterone which causes Wolffian structure maintenance

A

Leydig

24
Q

What will loss of function in a gene that is critical in forming AMH or its receptor cause in a male?

A
  • Retention of Mullerian structures in XY male - Bilateral cryptorchidism
25
Q

Differentiation of genital tubercle to dependent on exposure to high concentrations of ___

A

DHT

26
Q

Lower concentrations of androgen or partial insensitivity will result in ____ of external genitalia

A

Partial virilisation

27
Q

Absence or complete resistance to androgens results in _____

A

Female external genitalia