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Chapter 28 - Development
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SPERM MIGRATION In upper 1/3 of fallopian tubes within 24 hrs of ovulation & 48 hrs of insemination. Only about 3000 of original 300 million make it.
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CAPACITATION Even after arrival at egg, sperm can’t fertilize.
Fluids in female soften plasma membrane and dilute inhibitory factors that prevent the acrosome from working Ca++ diffuses in and enhances tail lashing
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CAPACITATION Timing – sperm live only 6 days, so can’t get pregnant more than a week before ovulation, nor more than 14 hours after [ egg won’t be viable long enough]
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Fertilization Several sperm needed to enzymatically penetrate cell layers around the ovum – acrosome reaction – exocytosis of acrosome Only 1 sperm enters the ovum - tail & midpiece disintegrate, egg releases enzymes to destroy sperm surface receptors – prevents polyspermy.
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Fertilization
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MEIOSIS Oocyte now completes meiosis.
23 male chromosomes + 23 female chromosomes join to form zygote.
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TRIMESTERS 1 - Fertilization through week 12 – most sensitive time-over half die 2 - Weeks 13 through 24 – complete most organ development – near end IS possible to survive birth
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TRIMESTERS weeks – birth - growth continues to point where survival is more likely – brain liver & kidneys have to develop further AFTER birth. Single births usually 40 weeks, twins 35 weeks
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CLEAVAGE/PRE-EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT
Mitotic cell divisions produce identical copies. Morula - solid ball of cells. Blastocyst - hollow ball - cavity is called blastocoel. Made of trophoblast [outer layer] & Inner cell mass
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Human Morula
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Human Blastocyst
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CLEAVAGE/PRE-EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT
Becomes implanted in endometrium - inner cell mass facing endometrial wall. TAKES ABOUT 1 WEEK. Trophoblast gives rise to chorion - forms placenta with chorionic villi – secretes hCG to maintain corpus luteum.
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CLEAVAGE/PRE-EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT
Inner cell mass forms embryo and other extra-embryonic membranes
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IMPLANTATION ~ 6 days after ovulation
Trophoblast cells facing wall fuse syncytiotrophoblast – grows into uterus Uterus responds by growing over and burying entire blastocyst Ideally blastocyst implants HIGH on the wall. Trophoblast grow into placenta
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IMPLANTATION ~ 6 days after ovulation
Placenta - nutritive bridge between mother & fetus –by end of 3rd month Produces large amounts of hCG - peaks at wk 8-9, drops to constant level at wk 16, stimulates corpus luteum to continue secretion of ES and P Later, the placenta secretes its own P and ES to maintain pregnancy, and relaxin to aid in delivery and prevent premature contractions
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EXTRA-EMBRYONIC MEMBRANES
Chorion - outer -derived from trophoblast of blastocyst. Forms placenta. Secretes estrogens, progesterone, relaxin. Amnion - for protection. Filled with amniotic fluid. Shock absorber for fetus. Repository for fetal urine, etc.
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EXTRA-EMBRYONIC MEMBRANES
Allantois - blood vessels to placenta and umbilicus. Later becomes ligament attached to urinary bladder. Yolk sac - has little yolk, but source of early blood cells & primordial gametes.
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EMBRYOGENESIS Embryoblast flattens into embryonic disc in amniotic cavity – 2 layers – epiblast [toward cavity, hypoblast – away from] Primitive streak forms along midline with primitive groove running down it bilateral symmetry, front and back defined
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EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT - Gastrulation
Results in 3 germ layers - ectoderm, endoderm, mesoderm. Epiblast will become ectoderm [skin, etc. and CNS] Migration of epiblast cells into and through the primitive groove to replace hypoblast cells with endoderm – will be gut lining
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EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT - Gastrulation
Then a third layer migrates in between the two = mesoderm [will become mesenchyme – basis of connective tissues, and muscle
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