An oocyte, ovocyte, or rarely oöcyte, is
a female
gametocyte or
germ cell involved in
reproduction.
Formation
The formation of an oocyte is called oogenesis. Thus,
oogenesis is a form of
gametogenesis whose male counterpart is
spermatocytogenesis. Oogenesis results in the formation of
both primary oocytes before birth, and of secondary
oocytes after it as part of
ovulation.
- The division of an
oogonium by
mitosis creates two
diploid primary oocytes which are kept in a prolonged
prophase I, known as the
Dictyate stage, ready to continue
meiosis when
puberty begins.
- As part of ovulation, primary oocytes undergo the first
meiotic division, which sees homologous chromosomes pair
during
prophase and split from one another during
anaphase. This forms one
haploid secondary oocyte and the first
polar body.
- A second period of arrested development occurs after the
first meiotic division forms the secondary oocyte. The egg
may be expelled from the ovary in this condition, and in
many species, including humans, the second meiotic division
is not completed until the egg is fertilized by a
sperm.
- The oocyte divides in
meiosis II into one
ootid and the second polar body. The ootid then
differentiates into an
ovum.
Characteristics
- The secondary oocyte is the largest cell in the body,
and in humans is just visible to the naked eye.
- Oocytes are rich in
cytoplasm which contains yolk granules to nourish the
cell early in development.
- The only normal type of secondary oocyte has sex
chromosomes 23,X (where sperm can be 23,X or 23,Y).
Abnormalities
- If
nondisjunction occurs -- that is, if the chromosomes
fail to separate properly -- a secondary oocyte may have the
wrong number of sex chromosomes, for example 22,X or 24,X.
This is the cause of conditions like
Down syndrome and
Edwards syndrome.
- Some oocytes have multiple
nuclei, although it is thought they never mature.
Additional images
Scheme showing analogies in the process of
maturation of the ovum and the development of
the spermatids.
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Resources
William K. Purves, Gordon H. Orians, David Sadava, H. Craig
Heller, Craig Heller (2003). Life: The Science of Biology(7th
ed.), pp. 823–824
See also
External links
Category:
Germ cells
The content of this section is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License
(local copy). It
uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Oocyte"
modified March 10, 2007 with previous authors
listed in its history.