REPRODUCTION IN HUMANS Formation of gametes A Spermatogenesis B Oogenesis.

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REPRODUCTION IN HUMANS Formation of gametes A Spermatogenesis B Oogenesis

Transcript of REPRODUCTION IN HUMANS Formation of gametes A Spermatogenesis B Oogenesis.

Page 1: REPRODUCTION IN HUMANS Formation of gametes A Spermatogenesis B Oogenesis.

REPRODUCTION IN HUMANS

Formation of gametes

A Spermatogenesis

B Oogenesis

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SPERMATOGENESIS

Production of spermBegins between ages

of 11 to 15 and continues until death

100 to 200 million sperm are made a day

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SPERMATOGENESIS

Each seminiferous tubule is surrounded by a layer of epithelium on which sit spermatogonia

These divide by mitosis to form dipolid cells

Some of these cells move towards the middle of the tubule becoming primary spermatocytes

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SPERMATOGENESIS

Primary spermatocytes then divide by meiosis.

After first meiotic division two secondary spermatocytes are formed.

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SPERMATOGENESIS

Two or three days later the secondary spermatocytes undergo a second meiotic division to produce haploid spermatids.

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SPERMATOGENESIS

The spermatids mature over the next few weeks into spermatozoon.

The whole process takes about 64 days.

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SPERMATOGENESIS

At all stages the developing sperm are supported and nourished by much larger non-dividing cells called Sertoli cells or nurse cells.

The fully developed sperm are carried by a fluid released by the Sertoli cells.

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OOGENESIS

Each ovary weighs about 15g and contains many eggs at different stages of development.

The process begins when a girl is still an embryo

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Removing an ovarian cyst!

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OOGENESIS

5 or 6 weeks after zygote forms some cells in embryo ovary undergo mitosis to produce diploid oogonia

By 24 weeks the embryo contains millions of oogonia

From then until 6 weeks after birth the oogonia undergo a first meiotic division to form primary oocytes.

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OOGENESIS

They remain half way through this division for many years.

Most of the primary oocytes disappear – by puberty about 400 000 remain.

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OOGENESIS

As development recommences some of the surrounding ovary cells form the primordial follicle which later develops into the primary follicle

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OOGENESIS

At puberty hormones stimulate the primary follicle to become a secondary follicle

One of these will develop each 28 days into an ovarian follicle containing the developing primary oocyte

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OOGENESIS

The meiotic division commenced as an embryo now completes.

This results in a large secondary oocyte and a tiny polar body

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OOGENESIS

It is at this stage that the oocyte is released at the moment of ovulation.

The meiotic division does not actually complete until after the sperm has entered it.