primary follicles

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Transcript primary follicles

FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM

The female reproductive system consists of the internal reproductive organs and the external genitalia

• Internal reproductive organs are • External genitalia include -ovaries -oviducts -uterus -vagina -mons pubis -labia majora et minora -clitoris -vestibule of vagina urethral orifice

OVARY

Production of

gametes

and production of

steroid hormones

are the two major roles of the ovaries, which, therefore have two interrelated functions:

gametogenesis (oogenesis)

and

steroidogenesis

• • Two major groups of steroid hormones are secreted by the ovaries:

Estrogens

secreted by ovarian follicles promote growth and maturation of internal and external genitalia

Progesterone

secreted by corpus luteum prepare the internal reproductive organs, mainly the uterus, for pregnancy

OVARIAN STRUCTURE

The ovary is composed of cortex and medulla

• Medulla or medullary region – is located in the central portion of the ovary, contains loose connective tissue, blood vessels and nerves • Cortex or cortical region – found in the peripheral portion of the ovary surrounding the medulla, contains the ovarian follicles embedded in a richly cellular connective tissue • The surface of the ovary is covered by tunica albuginea – connective tissue with a single layer of cuboidal cells, called germinal epithelium

OVARIAN FOLLICLES

Primordial follicles Growing follicles (primary, secondary/ antral follicles) Mature or Graafian follicles

Primordial follicles

– are found in the stroma of the cortex just beneath the ovarian surface – a single layer of squamous follicular cells surrounds the oocyte • The

primary follicles

is the first stage of the growing follicle: follicular cells become cuboidal → between the oocyte and the adjacent follicular cells forming

zona pellucida

→ follicular cells undergo stratification to form the

granulosa layer

of the primary follicle

OVARIAN FOLLICLES

• The

secondary antral follicle

is characterized by a fluid containing antrum • Connective tissue investment forms

theca folliculi:

the theca interna – highly vascularized layer of cudoidal secretory cells; the theca externa – outher layer of connective tissue cells and fibers • The granulosa cells associated with the oocyte form the

cumulus oophorus,

that project into the antrum. The cells of the cumulus oophorus that immediately surround the oocyte are called

corona radiata

• The

Graafian follicle

contains the primary oocyte, surrounded by

zona pellucida, corona radiata, follicular fluid, zona granulosa, theca interna and theca externa

OVULATION

Ovulation

is a hormone-mediated process by which the secondary oocyte is released from the Graafian follicle During ovulation the oocyte traverse entire follicular wall including the germinal epithelium due to

mechanisms

as follows : • Increase in the volume and pressure of the follicular fluid • Enzymatic proteolysis of the follicular wall • Hormonally directed deposition of glycosaminoglycans between the oocyte-cumulus complex and the stratum granulosum • Contraction of the smooth muscle fibers in the theca externa Just before ovulation

primary oocyte

completes first meiotic division and is transformed into the

secondary oocyte

, which in its turn is arrested at metaphase of the second meiotic division

CORPUS LUTEUM

After ovulation the

collapsed follicle

under the influence of LH undergoes reorganization into corpus luteum This process starts with the formation of the

corpus hemorrhagicum

with centrally located blood clot Two types of

luteal cells

are identified: (1) granulosa lutein cells; (2) theca lutein cells Corpus luteum is located within the cortex of the ovary and secretes

progesterone

The

corpus luteum of pregnancy

is formed after fertilization and subsequent implantation The

corpus luteum of menstruation

is formed in the absence of fertilization

OVIDUCT (UTERINE, FALLOPIAN TUBE)

The oviducts are paired tubes that extend bilaterally from the uterus toward the ovaries The oviducts transmit the ova from the ovary to the uterus and provide the necessary environment for fertilization The wall of the oviduct is composed of three layers: • tunica mucosa – lined by simple columnar epithelium composed of two kinds of cells: (1) ciliated cells; (2) nonciliated, peg cells • tunica muscularis – including inner circular and outer longitudinal layers • tunica serosa – covering mesothelium and a thin layer of submesothelial connective tissue

UTERUS

All subsequent embryonic and fetal development occurs within the uterus • • • The uterine wall is composed of three layers:

Endometrium

, tunica mucosa of the uterus, consists of two layers that differ in structure and function: -

stratum functionale

– proliferates and degenerates during the menstrual cycle -

stratum basale

– serves as the source for the regeneration of stratum functionale; lamina propria house the uterine glands

Myometrium

– the thickest layer of the uterine wall, composed of three idnistinctly defined layers of smooth muscle

Perimetrium

– visceral peritoneal covering of the uterus

MENSTRUAL CYCLE

Menstrual cycle

is controlled, ultimately, by gonadotropins secreted by the pars distalis of the pituitary gland that regulate the steroid secretion of the ovary • • •

Phases of menstrual cycle

are the defined cyclic changes of the endometrium:

Menstrual phase

(days 1 to 4), commencing as hormone production by the ovary declines with the degeneration of the corpus luteum

Proliferative (Follicular, Preovulatory) phase

(days 4-14), occuring concurrently with follicular maturation and influenced by ovarian estrogen secretion

Secretory (Luteal, Postovulatory) phase

(days 15 to 28), coinciding with the functional activity of the corpus luteum and primarily influenced by progesterone secretion

Placenta

• Placenta is an extraembryonic organ, responsible for supplying of embryo and fetus with oxygen, nutrients, hormones, antibodies, removal of toxic by-products of metabolism • Consists of two parts – maternal and fetal • Maternal part of placenta – decidual membrane – is a derivative of endometrial functional layer. It includes: (1) decidua basalis; (2) decidua capsularis; (3) decidua parietalis • Fetal part of placenta – the chorion – develops from trophoblast of the blastocyst, it includes chorionic plate and chorionic villi (there are designated primary, secondary, tertiary villi; anchoring and free villi)

Placenta: chorion and decidua formation

Placental barrier

Structures, located in between maternal and fetal blood, which prevent their mixing, are designated as placental barrier. It include • Endothelium of intravillous capillary bed • Intravillous mesenchime • Basement membrane • Cytotrophoblast layer • Syncytiotrophoblast

Inactive and lactating breast

Light micrograph of the human breast

EM of acinar cell from a lactating breast