Gametogenesis: Spermatogenesis and Oogenesis

  • The process of spermatogenesis
  • It is the process by which sperm (spermatozoa) develop in the testis’s seminiferous tubules.
  • There are two phases to it:
  • A. Spermatid formation: In this, spermatids are produced by sperm mother cells, also known as male germ cells or Spermatogonia.
  • B. spermiogenesis: Spermatoid transformation into sperm.
  • About 60 µ (0.06 mm) is the length of a mature sperm.
  • A plasma membrane surrounds the entire sperm body.
  • Three areas make up a sperm:
  • a. Head: Round in form.
  • composed of an acrosome and a nucleus.
  • Golgi complex forms the acrosome. Lytic enzymes are present in it.
  • There’s a neck behind the head.
  • b. Middle section: Consists of an axial filament encircled by cytoplasm and mitochondria.
  • Sperm motility is powered by energy produced by mitochondria.
  • c. Tail: consists of an axial filament in the center.
  • The sperm’s tail moves in an undulating manner within the female vaginal canal and aqueous medium.
  • During a coitus, a man ejaculates 200–300 million sperm.
  • A minimum of 60% of sperm must be of a regular size and shape for normal fertility.
  • At least 40% of them need to move vigorously.
  • It is the process by which an ovum forms and matures.
  • Graafian follicles are the location of it.
  • Oogenesis begins in the embryonic stage, when each ovary forms two million oogonia, or egg mother cells.
  • After birth, no more oogonia are created or added.
  • Oogonia proliferate to generate first oocytes.
  • They go into meiosis’s prophase I and are momentarily stopped there.
  • To produce a primary follicle, a layer of granulosa cells surrounds each primary oocyte.
  • During the period from infancy until puberty, many main follicles deteriorate. As a result, each ovary only contains 60,000–80,000 primary follicles during adolescence.
  • In order to create secondary follicles, granulosa cells and a new theca surround primary follicles.
  • A tertiary follicle develops from the secondary follicles. Its antrum, or hollow, is filled with fluid. An outside theca externa and an inner theca interna are formed by the theca layer.
  • In a tertiary follicle, the primary oocyte develops and goes through its first unequal meiotic division to create a tiny first polar body (n) and a big secondary oocyte (n).
  • Thus, the nutrient-rich main oocyte cytoplasm is retained in the subsequent oocyte.
  • Whether the initial polar body degenerates or divides further is uncertain.
  • The mature follicle (also known as the Graafian follicle) develops from the tertiary follicle.
  • The zona pellucida, or secondary oocyte, creates a new membrane.
  • Now, the Graafian follicle bursts, releasing the ovary’s secondary oocyte, or ovum. We refer to this as ovulation.
  • Both non-motile and spherical. roughly 0.2 mm across.
  • Three membranes surround the ovum:
  • a. Plasma membrane: Innermost layer.
  • b. Zona pellucida: Outer to the plasma membrane.
  • c. Corona radiata: Outer layer formed of follicle cells.

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