1-Germ cell development, gametogenesis and fertilisation

Developmental biology - understanding the mechanisms that control embryo developmentĀ 

  • Understanding which genes are turned on when which are turned off & how its regulatedĀ 


DifferentiationĀ 


Gene expression - genes that are actively transcribing mRNAĀ 


Genetic equivalence - genetic material in almost all cells is the sameĀ  - exception is immune cells that have more variation in their DNA for generating antibodiesĀ 

Evidence = Sir John Burden 1960s - nucleus of a frog's oocyte replaced with nucleus from gut cell - tadpoles can still be producedĀ 



  • Different distinct cell phenotypes occur because only a proportion of the genes are expressed (eg. neurons, pancreatic)Ā 


Somatic cells:Ā 

  • Cells of the bodyĀ 

  • Limited lifeĀ Ā 


Germ line cells:

  • Cells for reproductionĀ 

  • ImmortalĀ 

  • Female - oocytesĀ 

  • Male - sperm



GERM LINE

  • Oocyte and sperm cells generated from primordial germ cellsĀ 

OogenesisĀ 

  • MeiosisĀ 

  • Haploid DNA contentĀ 

  • Large gameteĀ 


SpermatogenesisĀ 

  • MeiosisĀ 

  • Small motile gameteĀ 

  • Haploid DNAĀ 



Mammalian developmentĀ 

  • Most development knowledge comes from studying mice - easy to manipulateĀ 


Monotremes - lay eggsĀ 

Marsupials - shorter gestation, immature young

Placentals - placentas, more mature when born than marsupialsĀ 







Mouse embryo development:Ā 


  • Human embryos don't undergo the elongation - they remain as a flat discĀ 





Why don't all the epiblast cells become primordial germ cells?

  • Cell signallingĀ 

  • Bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4) - signalling molecules secreted from extraembryonic tissueĀ 

  • BMP4 acts on cells in the epiblast that its most closely in contact with - it triggers the cells to become PGCs

  • High levels of BMP4 are needed for th


BMP4 receptors:

  • Transmembrane proteinsĀ 

  • Extracellular part is where the BPM4 bindsĀ 

  • Binding causes phosphorylation in cytoplasmic part - leads to cascade - new genes in the nucleus are turned onĀ 


How do we know this?Ā 



Cells from the top of the epiblast were transferred and transplanted to the region closest to the extraembryonic tissues


These cells are exposed to high enough levels of BMP4 to become PGCsĀ 

  • Shows that fate of the epiblast cells depends on their position in the embryo

  • Differentiation of PGCs is controlled by the environmentĀ 


Migration of PGCs:Ā 

Mechanism of their migration not fully understoodĀ 

  • They’re generated in the epiblast on day 6-7


  • Day 8 - migration into the gutĀ 

  • Day 11 - enter the genital ridges (tissue that gives rise to ovaries and testes)Ā 


6PGCs at the start - around 5000 when they enter the genital ridgesĀ 



Differentiation into sperm or oocytes?

  • PGCs in female genital ridge are committed to an oocyte fate and vice versaĀ 

  • XY PGCs in a foetal ovary will develop as oocytesĀ 

  • XX PGCs in foetal testis will develop as spermĀ 



Anne McLarenĀ 

  • Worked on PGC differentiationĀ 

  • - suggested that retinoic acid is important (metabolite of vitamin A)Ā 

  • IVF - showed the possibility to fertilise mouse oocytes in vitro to generate viable embryos






Retinoic acid signalling:Ā 

Retinoic acid:Ā 

  • Metabolite of vitamin AĀ 

  • Lipophilic - easily passes over the cell membraneĀ 

  • Important in stages of embryonic development by regulating gene expressionĀ 

  • PotentĀ 

  • Present in female and male foetal gonadsĀ 

  • Needed for PGCs to become oocytesĀ 

  • Male gonad cells express enzyme cytochrome P450 which degrades RA - inhibits oocyte differentiationĀ 


  • If XY PGCs are removed from the male gonad and placed in female gonad:

RA levels in environment increase, RA induces PGCs into oocytesĀ 


  • If XX PGCs are placed in male gonad - presence of cytochrome P450Ā 

RA degraded - PGCs differentiate into spermĀ 






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→ oocyteĀ 









  • Absence of retinoic acid - staining shows retinoic acid binding proteins on the outer area of the cellĀ 

  • Presence of retinoic acid - rapid translocation of the protein into the nucleusĀ 



















SPERMATOGENESISĀ 

  • Production of mature sperm cells from PGCsĀ 

  • Continuous and prolificĀ 

  • Occurs in seminiferous tubules of the testes

















  1. In male gonad, PGCs give rise to stem cells called spermatogonial sperm cellsĀ  (SSCs)Ā 

  2. SSCs generate more SSCs and differentiate to form primary spermatocytesĀ 

  3. Primary spermatocytes undergo meiosis to become secondary spermatocytesĀ 

  4. Secondary spermatocytes give rise to spermatidsĀ 

  • SSC proliferation and differentiation needs to be tightly controlledĀ 

  • Too MUCH proliferation could lead to formation of a tumourĀ 

  • Too LITTLE proliferation and too MUCH differentiation could deplete the SSC population - leading to male infertilityĀ 


Function of sperm components:Ā 


Acrosome - derived from golgi, contains enzymes that digest proteins and sugars; these enzymes are required to lyse the outer coverings of egg


Nucleus - contains haploid number of chromosomesĀ 


Midpiece - contains mitochondria that produce the energy (ATP) required for motilityĀ 


Flagellum - required for propulsion, motor portion of the flagellum is the axonemeĀ 



OOGENESISĀ 

  • Development of mature oocytes from PGCsĀ 

  • Occurs in ovaries

  • Begins in the embryo with the differentiation with the PGCs - to stem cells called oogoniaĀ 

  • Oogonia multiply by mitosis and begin meiosis - stops at prophase 1 - primary oocytesĀ 


  • Primary oocytes remain arrested in prophase 1 until pubertyĀ 













  • Each month follicle stimulating hormones trigger division of some of the primary oocytesĀ 

  • First mitotic division produces uneven sized cells - one is secondary oocyte, one is polar bodyĀ 

  • Secondary oocyte begins second mitotic division but is arrested in metaphase 2Ā 

  • If fertilised by sperm - complete second division - gives rise to 2nd polar bodyĀ 

  • Once meiosis 2 is complete - nucleus of ovum fuses with sperm nucleus - forms a zygoteĀ Ā 








Structure of oocyte:


Nucleus - nucleus of mature oocyte is arrested in 2nd metaphaseĀ 


Zona pellucida - thich extracellular matrix that binds spermĀ 


Cumulus - layer of ovarian follicular cells surrounding oocyte, layer adjacent to zona called corona radiataĀ 


Cytoplasm - contains proteins, ribosomes, tRNA, mRNAĀ 





FERTILISATIONĀ 


  1. Attraction and activation of sperm by contents of female reproductive tractĀ 

  • Different regions of tract secrete molecules that attract and affect sperm motilityĀ 

  • In some mammals, sperm becomes hyperactivated in the oviductĀ 

  • Ovarian follicle may secrete chemo-attractants that attract sperm towards oocyteĀ 


  1. Binding of sperm to zona pellucidaĀ 

  • Binding is species specific eg. mouse sperm only bind to oocyte that contain ZP3 glycoprotein on their surfaceĀ 

  1. Release of enzyme from acrosome to lyse hole in zonaĀ 

  • Eg. in mice - acrosomal reaction triggered by cross linking of proteins on sperm surface to ZP3Ā 

  • Enzymes released to make hole in zona so sperm can reach plasma membrane of the ovumĀ 

  • Passage of sperm through zonaĀ 

  • Plasma membranes of sperm and ovum fuseĀ 

  • Sperm nucleus enters


  1. Fusion of sperm and oocyte pronucleiĀ 

  • Sperm entry - female pronucleus stimulated to complete its 2nd meiotic divisionĀ 

  • Chromatin of male pronucleus uncoils

  • Each pronucleus migrates towards the otherĀ 

  • Two nuclear envelopes break downĀ 

  • Chromosomes orientate themselves on the mitotic spindle - creating a zygoteĀ 


→ female and male pronuclei are not equivalentĀ 

  • Some genes are imprinted and only expressed from either maternal or paternal chromosomeĀ 

  • Hydatiform mole - only has male chromosomes - mass of placenta like cells - embryo doesn't develop - can give rise to tumoursĀ 

  • Parthenogenetic embryos - only has female chromosomes - sometimes has organs - chaotic development and embryo becomes grossly disorganisedĀ 


Prevention of polyspermy:Ā 

  • After fusion - cortical reaction occurs

  • Egg releases enzymes that harden zona pellucida so no more sperm can penetrate

  • Mice - enzymes modify ZP3 so oocyte can't bind to spermĀ Ā