Sperm Development Flashcards
How are sperm produced?
- Spermatozoa are produce in the seminiferous tubules of the testicles
- Spermatogenesis involves:
- Proliferation of stem cell (mitosis)
- Meiotic division of stem cells (become haploid) starts near puberty
- during meiosis, homologous chromosomes form pairs (one from sire and one from dam - and exchange DNA
- Therefore every chromosome in a sperm cell has DNA from both the sire and dam
- Differentiation from a nucleated round cell to the specialized tad-pole shaped sperm cell
What is the structure of the testicle? how does it sperm flow through to the vas deferens?
- Made up of closely packed seminiferous tubules
- 90% of testicular tissue in bulls, rams, rats
- to a low of 60% of testicular tissue in boars and stallions
- Seminiferous tubules ⇢ Rete testis (channels in center of testis) ⇢ Efferent ducts (3-20 ducts) ⇢ epididymis (single tube) ⇢ vas deferens (thick muscular wall)
What is the Epididymis? function? structure?
- Metabolically active
- Sperm cell matures here
- Divided into 3 regions
- Head
- body
- Tail (storage)
What Physiologic changes occur in spermatozoa as they transverse the tubular tract?
- Gain the ability for progressive motility
- Acrosome matures (“tightens” onto head - gets rid of excess membrane)
- Plasma membrane - stiffens in some areas and increases flexibility in others
- All are testosterone- dependent
What is the Blood-Testis Barrier? Structure? functions?
- Tight junctions between Sertoli cells divide the tubules into 2 compartments
- Basal compartment - contains spermatogonium and preleptotene spermatocytes
- Adluminal compartment - communicates with lumen and contains more advanced stages
- Wide range of permeability:
- complete exclusion of antibodies
- Free transfer of androgen-binding protein and inhibin
- Keeps haploid cells from initiating immune response
What are the different types of scrotums?
- Reptiles and birds do not have scrotums
- Intra-abdominal testes
- elephants, dolphins whales, armadillos
- Non-pendulous scrotums
- pigs, horses, cats
- Pendulous scrotums
- dogs, cattle, sheep, primates
What is the Tunica Dartos?
- Smooth muscle just below the scrotal skin
- Helps regulate testicular temperature
- Contraction - reduces surface area available for heat loss (cold day)
- Relaxation - increases surface area for heat loss (hot day)
What is the Pampiniform Plexus
- Counter current exchange of heat between testicular artery and vein
- Decreases temperature of blood arrive at testicle by about 5°C
What is ‘Puberty’?
- The onset of puberty is controlled by the maturing hypothalamic-pituitary-gonad axis
- In the bull - “the age when an ejaculate has a minimum of 50 million sperm cells with at least 10% motility
- far below the level acceptable for breeding
How are disturbances of spermatogenesis manifested?
- Reduced sperm production
- increased sperm abnormaities
What are the types of testicular degeneration?
- Temporary - followed by regeneration
- Permanent - with fibrosis
What are the different reasons (pathogenesis) for abnormal sperm production?
- Stress - pain, hunger, cold
- Heat - obesity, scrotal abnormality, climate, fever
- Season - photoperiod, nutrition, temp
- Hereditary - sperm defects, testis size
- Puberty - resembles distrubed spermatogenesis
- Toxicity - plant, bacterial, environmental
- Nutritional - protein, vit A or Se deficiency
How does Stress affect sperm production?
- Stress suppresses LH release
- LH is necessary for Testosterone - essential for normal spermatogenesis and epididymal function
How does increased body temperature affect spermatogenesis?
- Kills developing sperm
- for 1-2 weeks
- Poor quality sperm
- at least a month
- different defects seen based on where the sperm was at the time of insult (see chart)
- Gradual improvement
- normal in 3 months
How long does it take to produce sperm?
- ~39 days from spermatogonia to mature elongated spermatids
- ~7-16 days to transverse the epididymis (species dependent)