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Reproductive system. Chromosomes. Each cell has 46 chromosomes One pair of sex chromosomes female XX male XY 22 pairs of autosomes Each chromosome in pair (homologous pair) contains genes for same traits at same positions (allelles) One chromosome in each pair came from each parent.
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Chromosomes • Each cell has 46 chromosomes • One pair of sex chromosomes • female XX • male XY • 22 pairs of autosomes • Each chromosome in pair (homologous pair) contains genes for same traits at same positions (allelles) • One chromosome in each pair came from each parent
Male reproductive system • Male reproductive structures include: • testes • ducts • accessory sex glands • supporting structures
Testes • Testes (testicles) • contain seminiferous tubules in which spermatozoa are made • Reproduction and survival of sperm require temperature lower than normal core body temperature
Spermatogenesis • Spermatogenesis • production of haploid sperm in the seminiferous tubules of the testes • Crossing-over occurs in conversion from primary - secondary spermatocyte (haploid) • Sperm produced at rate of approx 300 million per day • once ejaculated life expectancy of 48 hours
Spermatogenesis • Sperm cell consists of: • Head • Acrosome contains enzymes which aid penetration of secondary oocyte • Midpiece • Mitochondria for ATP production • Tail
Hormonal control of spermatogenesis • At puberty GnRH stimulates anterior pituitary secretion of FSH and LH • LH - assists spermatogenesis by stimulating production of testosterone • FSH - (together with testosterone) initiates spermatogenesis
Hormonal control of spermatogenesis • Testosterone • stimulates sperm maturation • controls • Growth, development, functioning and maintenance of sex organs • also stimulates • bone growth • protein anabolism
Hormonal control of spermatogenesis • Inhibin- produced by Sertoli cells and inhibits FSH to stop spermatogenesis
Semen • Semen • mixture of sperm and accessory sex gland secretions (seminal fluid) • Accessory sex gland secretions: • provide fluid medium for transport of sperm • provide nutrients (fructose etc) for sperm ATP production • neutralizes acidity of male urethra and female vagina • contains antibiotic (seminal plasmin)
Female reproductive system • Female organs of reproduction include: • ovaries • fallopian tubes • uterus • vagina • vulva • mammary glands
Ovaries • Paired glands homologous to testes • Follicles in cortex contain oocytes in various stages of development • Mature follicle expels oocyte - ovulation • Corpus luteum - remnants of ovulated follicle • produces hormones that promote uterine preparation for acceptance of fertilized ovum
Female reproductive cycle • Female reproductive cycle encompasses: • ovarian cycle • series of events associated with maturation of ovum • uterine (menstrual) cycle • changes in endometrium to prepare for reception of fertilized ovum
Phases of female reproductive cycle • 3 phases of reproductive cycle: • menstrual phase (~ 5 days) • ovarian follicles begin to develop (FSH) • stratum functionalis layer of endometrium shed
Phases of female reproductive cycle • preovulatory phase and ovulation (6-14 days) • one or more follicles mature • LH stimulates mature follicle to produce more estrogen • Estrogen (+ inhibin) from mature follicle inhibits secretion of FSH so no more follicles mature • endometrial repair
Phases of female reproductive cycle continued • ovulation (usually occurs on day 14 in 28 day cycle) • high estrogen exerts +ve feedback on LH and GnRH • GnRH promotes more LH (and FSH) release by anterior pituitary • LH surge causes ovulation • LH stimulates corpus luteum development
Phases of female reproductive cycle continued • Post ovulatory (luteal) phase (days 15 - 28) • large secretion of estrogen and progesterone (+ inhibin) by corpus luteum • if no fertilization and implantation - corpus luteum degenerates and fall in estrogen and progesterone initiates menstrual cycle • if fertilization and implantation - corpus luteum maintained by HcG from developing embryo until placenta takes over hormone production
Hormonal contraception • Normally, high estrogen exerts positive feedback on LH causing ovulation • Moderate levels of estrogen inhibit LH secretion • Progesterone inhibits positive feedback of estrogens on LH • Oral contraceptive pill contains progesterone and moderate levels of estrogens • Inhibition of LH prevents ovulation
Aging and the reproductive systems • Puberty • Increased GnRH secretion • Stimulates increased secretion of FSH and LH • secondary sexual characteristics begin to develop and potential for sexual reproduction attained • Leptin appears to play a role in onset of puberty • Mice lacking functional leptin gene remain in prepubertal state
Aging and the reproductive systems continued • Menopause • 40-50 yo • Pool of ovarian follicles decline • Ovaries less responsive to LH and FSH • estrogen and progesterone decrease and follicles do not undergo normal development • hot flashes, copious sweating, headache, vaginal dryness, depression, weight gain, emotional fluctuations • also increased incidence of osteoporosis, uterine cancer and breast cancer
Aging and the reproductive systems continued • Males often retain reproductive capacity into 80s and 90s • Decreasing levels of testosterone • decreased muscle strength • decreased sexual desire • decreased viable sperm • Prostate disorders increasingly common with age, particularly benign hypertrophy
Fertilisation and growth • Sperm must undergo capacitation in order to be able to fertilise ovum • Capacitance mediated by female reproductive secretions • Plasma membrane over acrosome removed • Tail beats more vigorously • Fusion of sperm with secondary oocyte (syngamy) blocks polyspermy • Fast block – depolarisation of membrane • Slow block – exocytosis of molecules that harden zona pellucida and block sperm receptors (ZP3) • Fertilisation • genetic material from haploid sperm cell and haploid oocyte merges into single diploid nucleus
Fertilisation and growth • Fertilized ovum (zygote) undergoes rapid mitotic divisions • Forms blastocyst which implants in endometrium approx 6 days post-fertilisation • Embryonic period (first 8 weeks) • rudiments of all adult organs formed • placenta functioning • Fetal period (8 weeks to full term (38 weeks)) • final development of organ systems
Maternal changes - anatomical and physiological • Enlarging uterus compresses a number of structures • stomach - leads to heartburn etc • bladder - stress incontinence (40% increase in GFR) • Weight gain • Lower back pain • lordosis
Maternal changes - anatomical and physiological continued • Cardiovascular changes • increase in SV • increase in cardiac output • increase in HR at given work load • increase in blood volume (mostly during latter half of pregnancy) • Uterus may compress large blood vessels reducing venous return
Maternal changes - anatomical and physiological continued • Pulmonary changes: • increase in tidal volume • decrease in ERV • increase in minute volume of ventilation • decrease in airway resistance • increase in oxygen uptake at given work load • Dyspnea (difficulty breathing)
Maternal changes - anatomical and physiological continued • other changes: • increase in appetite and decreased motility - can result in constipation • nausea, vomiting and heartburn • increased skin pigmentation • stretch marks • increased hair loss • pregnancy-induced hypertension • preeclampsia - impaired renal function due to large amounts of protein in the blood. • eclampsia - preeclampsia combined with convulsions and coma
Labor • Initiated by interaction of placental and fetal hormones • Inhibition of progesterone plays a role • Progesterone inhibits uterine contraction • Once initiated, labor maintained by positive feedback involving: • Stretch of cervix • Oxytocin • Three stages of labor: • Dilation • Expulsion • Placental stage
Exercise and pregnancy • Moderate physical activity • No evidence of inadequate blood flow to placenta • Avoid overheating • Neural tube defects
Inheritance • Passage of hereditary traits from one generation to the next • Homologous chromosomes • One chromosome from each parent – determines genotype • Alleles – alternative forms of a gene coding for same trait (at same location on each chromosome) • Homozygous - person with same alleles on homologous chromosomes • Heterozygous – person with different alleles on homologous chromosomes • Phenotype – physical expression of a gene
Inheritance • Dominant – Recessive inheritance • Dominant allele - masks presence of another allele • Recessive allele – presence masked completely • Phenotypic expression of a gene not usually simple Dominant-Recessive relationship • generally influenced by other genes and environment
Inheritance • Incomplete dominance • Neither allele is dominant over the other • Heterozygote has phenotype intermediate between homozygous dominant and homozygous recessive • Eg sickle cell anaemia • heterozygote has hemoglobin which is half normal and half not
Inheritance • Multiple allele inheritance - result of some genes having more than two alternate forms • Only two forms of allele inherited (one from each parent) • Example ABO blood group • Four ABO blood groupings result from six combinations of three different alleles of the I gene • Allele IA produces the A antigen • Allele IB produces the B antigen • Allele i produces neither the A nor B antigen
Inheritance • Complex inheritance • Most inherited traits controlled by effects of: • two or more genes (polygenic inheritance) • Many genes and environmental factors • One genotype can have many phenotypes or one phenotype can have many genotypes • Eg person may inherit many genes for tallness, but potential height may not be reached due to environmental factors
Inheritance • Sex chromosomes • Female sex chromosomes – XX • One X chromosome inactivated so only one chromosome used for protein synthesis • Male sex chromosomes – XY • Spermatocytes undergoing meiosis produce 2 sperm with X chromosomes and 2 with Y • Oocytes undergoing meiosis produce 4 ova with X chromosomes • Gender determined by father’s chromosomes
Inheritance • Sex chromosomes also responsible for transmission of several non-gender traits • Sex-linked inheritance • Most genes for these traits present on larger X chromosome but absent from Y chromosome • eg red-green colour blindness
From: http://www.come-over.to/FAS/WhoseBabyIsThis.htm Inheritance • Teratogens • Any agent or influence that causes developmental defects in the embryo • May act directly on developing embryo, or indirectly (eg on placenta) • eg fetal alcohol syndrome • Characteristic features – thin upper lip, sunken bridge of nose • Brain damage • Defective heart and other organs • Malformed limbs • Genital abnormalities