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Reproduction one property of a living thing great variety of methods Sexual reproduction each offspring has 2 parents and receives genetic material from both provides genetic diversity foundation for survival and evolution of species 27-1
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Male and female gametes (sex cells) combine their genes to form a fertilized egg (zygote) one gamete has motility (sperm) parent producing sperm considered male has Y chromosome in most mammals other gamete (egg or ovum) contains nutrients for developing zygote parent producing eggs considered female in mammals the female also provides shelter for the developing fetus (uterus and placenta) 27-2
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Primary sex organs produce gametes (testes or ovaries) Secondary sex organs male - ducts, glands, penis deliver sperm cells female - uterine tubes, uterus and vagina receive sperm and nourish developing fetus Secondary sex characteristics develop at puberty to attract a mate pubic, axillary and facial hair, scent glands, body morphology and low-pitched voice in males 27-3
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Our cells contain 23 pairs of chromosomes 22 pairs of autosomes 1 pair of sex chromosomes (XY males: XX females) males produce 50% Y carrying sperm and 50% X carrying all eggs carry the X chromosome Sex of child determined by type of sperm that fertilizes mother’s egg 27-4
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Gonads begin to develop at 6 weeks The male and female reproductive systems have different embryological origins mesonephric ducts develop into male reproductive system paramesonephric ducts (müllerian ducts) develop into female reproductive tract 27-5
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SRY gene (Sex-determining Region of Y gene) in males, codes for a protein that causes development of testes testes secrete testosterone testes secrete müllerian-inhibiting factor which degenerates paramesonephric ducts In absence of hormones, fetus becomes phenotypically ‘female’ 27-6
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External genitals of both sexes begin as a genital tubercle becomes glans of penis or clitoris pair of urogenital folds enclose urethra of male or form labia minora a pair of labioscrotal folds scrotum or labia majora 27-7
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All 8 week old fetuses have same 3 structures by end of week 9, begin to show sexual differentiation distinctly male or female by end of week 12 27-8
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Begin development near kidney gubernaculum (cordlike structure containing muscle) extends from gonad to abdominopelvic floor it shortens, guides testes to scrotum Descent begins in weeks 6-10, finished by 28 3% born with undescended testes (cryptorchidism) Location outside pelvic cavity essential for low temperatures needed for sperm production 27-9
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Impotence – Inability to sustain an erection sufficient for sexual intercourse, or inability to ejaculate Male Sterility – Infertility caused by disorders of the male reproductive system BPH – Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy Cryptorchidism – Undescended testicle(s) 27-11
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Pouch holding testes divided into 2 compartments by median septum Spermatic cord travels up from scrotum to pass through inguinal canal contains testicular artery, vein, nerve and lymphatics 27-12
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27-13 Circumcision
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Muscular control Cremaster muscle Dartos muscle Counter-current exchange Pampiniform plexus 27-14
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Oval organs, 4 cm long x 2.5 cm in diameter covered anteriorly by tunica vaginalis Tunica albuginea white fibrous capsule on testes Septa divide testes into compartments containing seminiferous tubules each tubule lined with a thick germinal epithelium for sperm interstitial cells between tubules - testosterone Rete testis seminiferous tubules drain here 27-15
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Efferent ductules 12 small ciliated ducts collecting sperm from rete testes and transporting it to epididymis Epididymis (head, body and tail) 6 m long coiled duct adhering to posterior of testis site of sperm maturation and storage (fertile for 60 days) Ductus deferens (peristalsis during orgasm) muscular tube 45 cm long passing up from scrotum through inguinal canal to posterior surface of bladder Ejaculatory duct 2 cm duct formed from ductus deferens and seminal vesicle and passing through prostate to empty into urethra 27-16 Vasectomy
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Regions: prostatic, membranous and penile --- totals 20 cm long 27-17
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Seminal vesicles - pair posterior to bladder empty into ejaculatory duct Prostate gland - single below bladder, surrounds urethra and ejaculatory duct 2 x 4 x 3 cm Bulbourethral glands - pair near bulb of penis empty into penile urethra lubricating fluid 27-18
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Internal root, shaft, and glans external portion 4 in. long when flaccid The foreskin is termed the prepuce 3 cylindrical bodies of erectile tissue corpus spongiosum along ventral side of penis encloses penile urethra corpora cavernosa diverge like arms of a Y Erection 27-19
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Hypothalamus produces GnRH Stimulates anterior pituitary (gonadotrope cells) to secrete LH stimulates interstitial cells to produce testosterone FSH stimulates sustentacular cells (Sertoli cells) to secrete androgen-binding protein (ABP) that interacts with testosterone to stimulate spermatogenesis 27-20
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Reproductive system remains dormant for years after birth surge of pituitary gonadotropins begins development 10-12 in most boys; 8-10 in most girls 27-21 Puberty period from onset of gonadotropin secretion until first menstrual period or first ejaculation of viable sperm Adolescence ends when person attains full adult height
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Enlargement of secondary sexual organs penis, testes, scrotum, ducts, glands Development of secondary sexual characteristics hair, scent and sebaceous glands develop muscle mass, vocal quality stimulates erythropoiesis and libido During adulthood, testosterone sustains libido, spermatogenesis and reproductive tract 27-22
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Enlargement of secondary sexual organs penis, testes, scrotum, ducts, glands Development of secondary sexual characteristics hair, scent and sebaceous glands develop muscle mass, vocal quality stimulates erythropoiesis and libido During adulthood, testosterone sustains libido, spermatogenesis and reproductive tract 27-23
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Mitosis produces two genetically identical daughter cells (for tissue repair, embryonic growth) Meiosis produces gametes for sexual reproduction 2 cell divisions (only one replication of DNA) meiosis I separates homologous chromosome pairs into 2 haploid cells meiosis II separates duplicated sister chromatids into 4 haploid cells 27-24
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Blood-testis barrier is formed by tight junctions between and basement membrane under sustentacular cells (Sertoli cells) 27-25 1 basal lamina, 2 spermatogonia, 3 spermatocyte 1st order, 4 spermatocyte 2nd order, 5 spermatid, 6 mature spermatid, 7 Sertoli cell, 8 tight junction (blood testis barrier)
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Spermatogonia produce 2 kinds of daughter cells type A remain outside blood-testis barrier and produce more daughter cells until death type B differentiate into primary spermatocytes cells must pass through BTB to move inward toward lumen - new tight junctions form behind these cells meiosis I 2 secondary spermatocytes meiosis II 4 spermatids 27-26
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Changes that transform spermatids into spermatozoa discarding excess cytoplasm and growing tails 27-27
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Head is pear-shaped front end 4 to 5 microns long structure containing the nucleus, acrosome and basal body of the tail flagella nucleus contains haploid set of chromosomes acrosome contains enzymes that penetrate the egg basal body 27-28
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Tail is divided into 3 regions midpiece contains mitochondria around axoneme of the flagella (produce ATP for flagellar movement) principal piece is axoneme surrounded by fibers endpiece is very narrow tip of flagella 27-29
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2-5 mL of fluid expelled during orgasm 60% seminal vesicle fluid, 30% prostatic, 10% sperm normal sperm count 50-120 million/mL Other components of semen fructose - energy for sperm motility fibrinogen causes clotting enzymes convert fibrinogen to fibrin fibrinolysin liquefies semen within 30 minutes prostaglandins stimulate female peristaltic contractions spermine is a base stabilizing sperm pH at 7.2 to 7.6 27-30
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27-31 Arteries of penis dorsal and deep arteries (branches of internal pudendal) deep artery supplies lacunae of corpora cavernosa dilation fills lacunae causing an erection normal penile blood supply comes from dorsal artery Nerves of penis abundance of tactile, pressure and temperature receptors dorsal nerve of penis and internal pudendal nerves lead to integrating center in sacral spinal cord both autonomic and somatic motor fibers carry impulses from integrating center to penis
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27-32 Excitement is characterized by vasocongestion of genitals, myotonia, and increases in heart rate, blood pressure and pulmonary ventilation Initiated by many different erotic stimuli Erection of penis is due to parasympathetic triggering of nitric oxide (NO) secretion dilation of deep arteries and filling of lacunae with blood Erection is maintained during plateau phase
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27-33 Climax (orgasm) is 15 second reaction that typically includes the discharge of semen (ejaculation) Ejaculation has two stages emission = sympathetic nervous system propels sperm through ducts as glandular secretions are added expulsion = semen in urethra activates muscular contractions that lead to expulsion
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27-34 Sympathetic signals constrict internal pudendal artery and reduce blood flow to penis penis becomes soft and flaccid (detumescence) Cardiovascular and respiratory responses return to normal Refractory period (10 minutes to few hours)
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