Describe the % of typically ejaculated sperm that reach the oocyte.
200 of 200 million sperm (0.01%) reach the secondary oocyte
Describe fertilization as a series of steps, including capacitation, acrosomal reaction, and fast & slow blocks to polyspermy
ONLY ONE SPERM CAN PENETRATE THE OOCYTE
Capacitation:
- The hydrolytic and proteolytic enzymes that were used to take the sperm through the female reproductive tract are stripped off the head of the sperm
Acromsomal reaction:
- When the sperm binds to a receptor on the zonal pellucida, the head is dissolved, releasing Acrosmal enzymes that digest the zonal pellucida to allow the sperm access to the cell membrane of the secondary oocyte
Fast block to polyspermy:
- First sperm contact with the membrane depolarizes it within seconds (Na ions rush into oocytes)
- Other sperm cant enter a depolarized oocyte
Slow block to polyspermy:
- Depolarization of the oocyte membrane (by inward Na surge) also releases Ca ions from intracellular stores, which cause vascular fusion with the oocyte membrane. Chemicals released from the vesicles “harden” what’s left of the Zona pellucida (closing the door on other sperm)
Describe fertilization in terms of pronuclei and ploidy.
Contrast the 3 types of maternal decidua based on location.
Basal decidua:
- Within the endometrium, so it functions as the “border” between the fetus and the mother
Capsular decidua:
- Surrounds the growing fetus and gradually pushes into the uterine cavity as the fetus grows
- Eventually moves across the entire uterine cavity to fuse with parietal decidua
Parietal decidua:
- Essentially the entire lining of the uterine cavity
Describe the two layers of the split trophoblast and the location & function of each in implantation & placentation.
Cytotrophoblast:
- Remains a complete cell layer covering the part of the embryo burrowing into the maternal Decidua (formerly known as the endometrium)
Synctiotrophoblast:
- The “tip of the spear”
- It’s more of a mass without definitive cell membranes
- “Digests” the decidua to make room for the invading embryo
Relate the two layers of the trophoblast to the eventual chorion & placenta
Describe the bilaminar disc that will become the embryo, relating the epiblast to the amnion, & amniotic cavity, and the hypoblast to the extraembryonic endoblast (or extracoelemic membrane) and the yolk sac
Describe the “fusing” of fetal chorionic tissue and maternal decidual tissue, and the diffusion path it creates
Describe the formation of the extracoelemic (& chorionic cavity) by extraembryonic mesoderm, and the formation of the connecting stalk & eventual umbilical cord
Contrast gastrulation & neurulation, focusing on the location, cells involved & structures produced
Gastrulation
- Making bilaminar disc into trilaminar
- The Epiblast of the bilaminar disc starts gastrulation by forming a central thickened region called a primitive streak, and at the head end is the primitive node.
- The epiblasts around the primitive streak migrate medially and inferiorly to become endoderm and replace hypoblast. They migrate down to pack mesoderm superiorly to endoderm and migrate laterally to rearrange themselves into ectoderm
- Some epiblast become specialized mesoderm that becomes the notochordal process which induces ectoderm to form a neural plate to start neurulation
Neurulation
- The first major step to molding a human body out of the trilaminar disc
- Making the neural tube that will become the brain
Contrast the 3 layers of the trilaminar disc, in terms of the type of tissue, and which part of the bilaminar disc gives rise to all 3.
Name one tissue of the adult body that derives from each of the 3 layers of the trilaminar disc
Ectoderm = tightly packed endothelial cells, epidermis of the integument
Endoderm= tightly packed epithelium, the internal lining of the GI tract
Mesoderm= loose connective tissue, muscle
Name the 3 common “views” that we use to look at the developing embryo & associated amniotic cavity & yolk sac
Dorsal
Partial
Transverse
Discuss the structure, and eventual fate, of the oropharyngeal & cloacal membranes
Describe the notochordal process, in terms of the process that developed it, its structure, location & role in neurulation
Describe the formation of neural crest cells, and give one example of a type of tissue that develops from neural crest cells.
Trace the progression of the 3 primary vesicles of the neural tube, through to the various parts of the adult brain.
Prosencephalon -> Telencephalon -> Cerebrum
Diencephalon -> Thalamus, hypothalamus, and epithalamus
Mesencephalon -> Mesencephalon -> Midbrain
Rhombencephalon-> Metencephalon -> Pons, Cerebellum
Myelencephalon > Medulla oblongata
Describe a chorionic villus, and an intervillus space, structurally, and functionally & based on who it belongs to – Mom or embryo/fetus.
Chorionic villi (fingers) were just formed from syncytiotrophoblasts.
- Belongs to the fetal placenta
- Interlocks intervillous spaces
Intervillus space
- Maternal part of the placenta
- Maternal blood leaks out of sinusoids into these spaces
Trace the diffusion path of oxygen and nutrients from maternal sinusoids to fetal blood, across the chorion.
Oxygen and nutrients from maternal sinusoids empty into intervillous space and diffuse into capillaries that enter the umbilical cord of the fetus.
Fetal waste is emptied from the capillaries, into the intervillous space, and out into the maternal sinusoids to be processed by Mom
Contrast lateral & head-tail folding, based on key structures formed by each
Lateral folding:
- Medially fuse and make a cylinder with ectoderm most superficially, mesoderm deep to that, and endoderm most deep
- Creates the gut tube from part of the yolk sac
Head-tail folding:
- Bring developing mouth and heart into their final adult positions and developing anus at the “tail” region of the embryo
Track the development of the 3 parts of the gut, by head-tail folding, and give a BRIEF description of GI structures formed by each of the 3
Identify ONE embryonic structure prominent at the 4th, 6th, 7th & 8th weeks of embryonic development.
Week 4= limb buds
Week 6= tail
Week 7= Short and webbed digits formed on limbs
Week 8= distinct digits
Name two things that happen during fetal growth.
Continuous growth and development of previously formed structures
Growth in mass
Name a handful of sources of maternal weight gain during pregnancy, focusing on which are fetally based, and which are maternally-based
Fetally based:
- Fetal growth
- Amniotic fluid
- Placenta growth
Maternally based:
- Placenta growth
- Uterine enlargement
- Body water increase
- Increased metabolite storage
- Breast enlargement