How are the gametes attracted during EXTERNAL fertilization
eg water by sea urchins
How to prevent polyspermy
fast block is when the egg plasma membrane changes electric potential
slow block is when cortical granule release
What is main difference between external fertilization and internal fertilization (mammals)
In external, acrosomal reaction triggered by extracellular coat of egg
In internal, acrosomal reaction triggered by zona pellucida, which is after the extracellular cumulus layer
What is acrosomal reaction (im guessing in mammlas?)
occurs after binding to zona pellucida
induced by zona proteins
releases enzymes :
hyaluronidase= penetration of the corona radiata barrier
trypsin-like substance =digestion of the zona pellucida
acrosin (zonalysin) =helps the spermatozoon cross the zona pellucida
What is sperm capacitation
When sperm acquires capacity to perform in fertilisation
What are 2 mechanisms to attract spermatozoa
Thermotaxis:capacitated spermatozoa can
sense thermal gradient along fallopian tube (in the
final part the temperature is about 2oC higher)
Chemotaxis: secreted molecules from cumulus
cells and oocyte.
What increases the hyperactivity of the sperm as it moves along fallopian tube
Ca 2+
How long is the process of fertilization in humans
24 hours- from when gametes fuse to first zygote division
Stages of fertilization
What happens when more than 1 sperm fuse
wrong number of chromosomes
spindle becomes multipolar rather than bipolar
What glycoproteins are in Zona pellucida
Zp glycoprotein matrix made during oocyte growth
contains ZP (ZP1, ZP2, ZP3 …).
What are the 2 major roles of ZP
Binds sperm
Activates acrosomal reaction after sperm bound
How does spermatozoon sense if
it is at the right place for activation of
acrosomal reaction.
Because there is A receptor on the sperm membrane
has to bind ZP in order to initiate the
acrosomal reaction.
ZP3 binding proteins in sperm plasma membrane (so acrosomal process not formed like in external)
Which sperm protein is essential for sperm egg fusion
IZUMO 1: immunoglobin at sperm head
localized at both the inner and
outer acrosomal membranes
What is the receptor for IZUMO 1 on the egg membrane and what is its role in preventing polyspermy
JUNO
JUNO disappears within 40 minutes of egg sperm fusion- prevents other sperm binding
Which region of the sperm head does membrane fusion occur
equatorial region- bc membrane on head tip already destroyed
What are some proteins involved in membrane fusion on sperm and egg
sperm: IZUMO 1, fertilin, ADAM family proteins
Egg: JUNO, integrins, cd9
How does IZUMO and JUNO cause membrane fusion
JUNO first binds to monomeric IZUMO1. The interaction is specific but weak.
An increased amount of JUNO gradually gathers to the attached site of the spermatozoon.
By the action of other proteins, IZUMO1 is folded and stays in firmly connected dimers.
The dimers are shorter than monomeric IZUMO1. That reduces the distance between egg and sperm
membranes. IZUMO1 no longer binds to JUNO and it leaves the complex.
What is the role of cd9
Involved in creation of microvilli and
microexesomes (small membrane vesicles
that facilitate membrane contacts).
What is the cortical reaction
cortical granules released upon fusion of of gamete membrane- BLOCKS POLYSPERMY
Content of granules:
What happens to the oocyte after gamete fusion
What happens to spermatozoon after gamete fusion
Why doesn’t the oocyte posses centrioles
To prevent parthenogenesis
How is the first centrosome formed in the egg?
Centriole imported from sperm to egg
Centriole duplicated during pronuclear phase = centrosome