Reproductive Physiology 1 Flashcards
What is oogenesis?
- process of oogenesis begins in the fetal ovaries where stem cells (oogonia) produce primary oocytes
- at birth there are at least 2 million primary oocytes in the ovary
- the primary oocytes are diploid (full set of 46 chromosomes)
- at the onset of puberty (>11 years) there are approx 300 000 primary oocytes and they slowly decrease over the reproductive life
- menopause starts when there are no more functional primary oocytes
- a max of about 500 eggs that could ever be released if you never became pregnant and always ovulated with every menstrual cycle for your entire reproductive life
Describe the process of oogenesis
- primary oocytes are held in prophase of meiosis I unchanged from the way they were produced in the fetus
- a number of primary oocytes restart meiosis I early in the menstrual cycle and a few become secondary oocytes
- this cohort of eggs is produced at the same time but only one of the secondary oocytes will be released from the ovary at ovulation
- completion of meiosis II begins exactly at the time when the sperm contacts the egg (fertilization)
- development of eggs in every cycle is called ovarian cycle
Describe the follicular phase of the ovarian cycle
-egg and granulosa cells develop up to the point of ovulation
Describe the luteal phase of the ovarian cycle
-where the leftover bits of the granulosa hang around and secrete hormones (particularly progesterone) to prepare the lining of the uterus (endometrium) for a fertilized egg (zygote)
Describe the process of the follicular and luteal phases
- granulosa cells develop around the follicle
- secondary follicle start to make antrum with a primary oocyte inside
- mature follicle with secondary oocyte and full antrum
- granulosa cells become the corpus luteum
- corpus luteum lasts about 14 days
- antrum is not large enough in this secondary follicle
- will get much larger
Describe the change from a primordial to primary follicle
- primordial has thin layer of flat follicular cells around primary oocytes
- cells become cuboidal granulosa cells in primary follicle
- zona pellucida begins to form
- primary follicle continues to develop with more granulosa on the outside
- zona pellucida stays around the primary oocyte
Describe the change from a primary to secondary follicle
- begin to make antrum
- cells continue to proliferate but gaps begin to occur between granulosa cells
- secrete follicular fluid which forms intracellular spaces to make it a secondary follicle
Describe the change from a secondary to mature follicle
- antrum areas will begin to come together to form a large antrum filled with fluid
- primary oocyte has completed meiosis I to become a secondary oocyte
- granulosa cells around the oocyte are referred to as the corona radiata
What stage of follicle is this?
- ovulated secondary oocyte
- end up with a polar body in meiosis with oocytes
- all of the nuclear material ends up split between the polar body and the oocyte (half and half)
Describe the homeostatic process leading to ovulation
- Stimulus: low estrogen levels in blood
- Hypothalamus (detector and control centre) has receptors that detect low estrogen
- Hypothalamus releases GnRH to the anterior pituitary
- Anterior pituitary releases LH and FSH which leads to follicle growth
- LH and FSH cause egg to develop into primary follicle, secondary, then mature follicle
- LH stimulates estrogen production from eggs which inhibit the GnRH signal then LH and FSH release
- Developing follicle continues to produce more and more estrogen which when estrogen levels get high enough, stimulates GnRH, LH, and FSH
- LH surge causes follicle to rupture and egg to be released
Describe the levels of FSH, LH, estrogen, and progesterone across a 28 day cycle
- estrogen increases causing LH and FSH surge
- drops a bit because corpus luteum takes a bit of time to start making estrogen
- if you don’t get pregnant, estrogen levels drop off and start the next cycle
- progesterone produced mainly by corpus luteum which doesn’t start producing hormones until after ovulation
What part of the endometrium grows during the menstrual cycle?
- stratum functionalis
- grows to approx 10mm
- menstruation is the loss of the stratum functionalis
- stratum basalis is always there