Spermatogenesis Flashcards
What are the 2 major compartments of the testes?
- seminiferous tubules: contain developing germ cells and sertoli cells
- interstitial cells: contain Leydig cells and blood and lymph vessels
What divides the seminiferous tubules from interstitial spaces and its function?
- blood-testes barrier
- prevents immune reaction to spermatozoa and separates fluids of different composition
What are the 3 stages of production of mature spermatozoa?
- mitotic proliferation
- meiotic divisions
- cell modelling (spermiogenesis)
How long is the spermatogenic cycle?
- 74 days
- occurs in waves every 16 days
What happens to the spermatozoa during differentiation?
- cytoplasmic links broken
- released into tubular lumen and sperm is immobile
How can sperm move if they are initially immobile?
- sertoli cells secrete fluids that flush the spermatozoa from the seminiferous tubules through rete testis to the epididymis
- epididymis fluid suppresses motility
- sperm moved by peristaltic muscle contraction
Describe the process of capacitation
- must occur before the sperm is able to fertilise oocyte
- glycoprotein coating gained in epididymis is stripped
- head acquires capacity to initiate acrosome reaction
- hyperactivation
How is infertility in males diagnosed?
Semen analysis:
- determination of sperm
- concentration/total count
- motility
- morphology
Define oligozoospermia, teratozoospermia, asthenozoospermia and azoospermia
- oligozoospermia: reduced sperm count (less than 15 million/ml)
- teratozoospermia: reduced percentage of sperm with normal
morphology - asthenozoospermia: reduced sperm motility (less than 40%)
- azoospermia: absence of sperm in ejaculate
Describe the role of the hypothalamus and pituitary gland in spermatogenesis
- hypothalamus secreted GnRH which binds to gonadotrophic cells on anterior pituitary
- causes release of LH and FSH
Describe regulation of gonadotropin secretion
- high GnRH pulse amplitude and frequency preferentially stimulates LH synthesis and secretion
- low GnRH pulse frequency stimulates FSH synthesis and secretion
Other than sex hormones what do the anterior and posterior pituitary glands secrette?
Anterior:
- lactotrophs (secrete prolactin)
Posterior:
- neurosecretory hormones:
- arginine
- vasopressin
- oxytocin
What is the importance of LH and FSH on spermatogenesis?
- Leydig have receptors for LH
- binding stimulates synthesis and secretion of testosterone
- low testosterone levels halt spermatogenesis
- FSH required for max sperm production
- acts on Sertoli cells
What happens when FSH binds to Sertoli cells?
- increases RNA and protein synthesis
- increased energy metabolism
- increased inhibin secretion
- increased cAMP, ABP and fluid secretion
- increased androgen receptors
What hormones are synthesised by the testes?
Leydig cells:
- testosterone
- oxytocin
- oestrogen
Sertoli cells:
- oestrogen
- inhibins