Sexual Differentiation: How to Make a Boy or a Girl COPY Flashcards
Prevalence of genital abnormalities is 1 in ….
Prevalence of genital abnormalities is 1 in 4500
Example of genital abnormalities
- 2 newborns - baby A and B
- Both genitically male
- doctors advise parents and perform surgery => female
- Baby A : happy, twenties (2004); married woman
- Baby B : never happy, years of depression, began testosterone treatment; lives as a man.
- At fault - doctor presuming that … + … provided a solution
Example of genital abnormalities
- 2 newborns - baby A and B
- Both genitically male
- doctors advise parents and perform surgery => female
- Baby A : happy, twenties (2004); married woman
- Baby B : never happy, years of depression, began testosterone treatment; lives as a man.
- At fault - doctor presuming that surgery + hormones provided a solution
What makes a boy/girl involves 3 main events:
- Sex determination, during …
- Differentiation of …, week …
- Differentiation of … and … genital organs, after week …
- Sex determination, during fertilization
- Differentiation of gonads, week 5
- Differentiation of internal and external genital organs, after week 5
Sex Determination
- Sex is determined at …
- Inheritance of X/Y from …
- Sex is determined at fertilization
- Inheritance of X/Y from father
Gonad Origin and Diff
- At week … primordial germ cells (PGCs) arise from the …
- PGCs are …potent
- PGC’ migrate to … … stalk to avoid becoming imprinted
- Later return, travelling to the genital … (next to kidney) and become the … gonad
- At week 2 primordial germ cells (PGCs) arise from the epiblast
- PGCs are pluripotent
- PGC’ migrate to yolk sac stalk to avoid becoming imprinted
- Later return, travelling to the genital ridge (next to kidney) and become the indifferent gonad
Gonad Origin and Diff (2)
- At genital …: XX PGCs replicate at …; XY PGCs replicate at the …
At genital ridge: XX PGCs replicate at cortex; XY PGCs replicate at the medulla
Gonad gender decision relies on:
- Genetic …
- H…
Genetic …:
- general … factors,
e. g. Wt1, Sf1 - specific promoters of … development
e. g. Sry, Sox9 - specific promoters of … development
e. g. Wnt-4, FoxL2
- Genetic switches
- Hormones
Genetic switches:
- general transcription factors,
e. g. Wt1, Sf1 - specific promoters of testis development
e. g. Sry, Sox9 - specific promoters of ovarian development
e. g. Wnt-4, FoxL2
Genetic switches:
- general transcription factors,
- e.g. W.., S..
- specific promoters of testis development
- e.g. S…, S…
- specific promoters of ovarian development
- e.g. …-4, …L2
- general transcription factors,
- e.g. Wt1, Sf1
- specific promoters of testis development
- e.g. Sry, Sox9
- specific promoters of ovarian development
- e.g. Wnt-4, FoxL2
Fate of Gonad Cell lines
- Fill in blanks where arrows are (what gender, what each makes)
- Left (Female) - follicular cells, oocytes, internal theca cells - future ovary
- Right (male)- ley dig cells, Pre-spematognia, sertoli cells - future testis
Fate of Gonad Cell Lines
- Female PGCs => … (primary oocytes)
- Sex cord cells => … (support and nutrifying the …)
- Cortex => layer of … cells => secrete … before those generated by the follicles
- Female PGCs => oogonia (primary oocytes)
- Sex cord cells => granulosa (support and nutrifying the ovum)
- Cortex => layer of thecal cells => secrete androgens before those generated by the follicles
Fate of Gonad Cell Lines
- Male PGCs => …
- … influences definition + identity of … cells => secretion of AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone)
- AMH supresses … development pathway
- AMH induce cells in intermediate mesoderm to become … => secrete …
- Male PGCs => spermatogonia
- Sry influences definition + identity of Sertoli cells => secretion of AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone)
- AMH supresses female development pathway
- AMH induce cells in intermediate mesoderm to become leydig => secrete testosterone
Kidney Development
- Origin: intermediate … (as the reproductive organs)
- Where: between the … and … plate (each side of the aorta)
- 3 Stages:
- … - disappears soon after
- … - leaves remnants
- … - becomes kidney
- Origin: intermediate mesoderm (as the reproductive organs)
- Where: between the somites and lateral plate (each side of the aorta)
- 3 Stages:
- Pronephros - disappears soon after
- Mesonephros - leaves remnants
- Metanephros - becomes kidney
Pronephros stage of kidney development - what is it?
kidney develops and degenerates straight after (the pronephros is a rudimentary, nonfunctional kidney that appears during the third week of development (eight- to nine-somite stage) and regresses by the fifth week.)
- Gonads are … at start
- They are linked to … development
- The middle stage of … development (…) leaves behind ducts that become integral part of the reproductive system
- Gonads are indiferent at start
- They are linked to kidney development
- The middle stage of kidney development (mesonephros) leaves behind ducts that become integral part of the reproductive system
Internal Genital Organs
- Begin differentiation at about week …, formed from a priori identical primordium structures, i.e
- embryos of … … possess two sets of paired ducts at the start:
- … a.k.a. Müllerian
- … a.k.a. Wolffian
- embryos of … … possess two sets of paired ducts at the start:
- Begin differentiation at about week 8, formed from a priori identical primordium structures, i.e
- embryos of both sexes possess two sets of paired ducts at the start:
- paramesonephric a.k.a. Müllerian
- mesonephric a.k.a. Wolffian
- embryos of both sexes possess two sets of paired ducts at the start:
Internal Genital Organs - in female embryo
- In female embryo: … duct is kept due to the absence of …
- … duct => becomes … (4)
- …
- …
- …
- upper part of the …
- In female embryo: Müllerian duct is kept due to the absence of AMH
-
Müllerian duct =>
- oviduct
- uterus
- cervix
- upper part of the vagina