What are the requirements for fertilisation?
a sperm - maturation and capactitation
an egg - arrested at metaphase II
Synchronised receptive endometrium
How does the ovum enter the fallopian tube?
cumulus oocyte complex is picked up by ciliated fimbriae on the infundibulum at the end of the uterine tube
- action of fimbrae controlled by menstrual cycle
What happens to sperm when in the female tract?
decrease rapidly as they move through
Where does fertilisation normally occur?
ampulla region of uterine tube
How long to sperm remain capable of fertilisation?
How long does an egg remain capable of fertilisation?
What does this mean?
What are the 5 steps of sperm interaction with egg vestments?
Describe penetration of the cumulus
After penetrating cumulus, sperm bind to zona pellucida
How?
Acrosome reaction permits zona penetration
exposes new membrane for oocyte fusion
What is the zona pellucida?
extracellular protein matrix which surrounds all mammalian eggs
Describe fusion
What are the 2 proteins reponsible for fusion?
Izumo
- sperm membrane receptor for fusion
- detectable on sperm surface only after acrosome reaction
- KO completely abolishes fusion
Juno
- receptor for Izumo on the oocyte plasma membrane
- KO abolishes fusion
Describe oocyte activation
What are the 2 key effects of Ca2+ increase and oocyte activation?
What is the cortical reaction?
What is the zona reaction?
What is meant by the loss of Juno?
What does the sperm contribute to the zygote?
- centriole - the oocyte has none, forms spindle for first cell division
What does the egg contribute to the zygote?
haploid female genome
cytoplasm
all organelles
mitochondria
Describe the zygotic/pronucleate (2PN) stage
What is syngamy?
Describe the transport of the embryo to the uterus
Describe the cleavage stages
What controls development of the embryo
> 2 cell stage = dependent on oocyte cytoplasm
4-6 cell stage = major burst of transcription
Many maternally derived proteins persist until blastocyst stage - poor oocyte maturation has big effect
Embryo metabolise, and growth is stimulated by a number of growth factors - both autocrine and paracrine -
What is compaction?