Utilisateur
- Only a small percentage will ever reach the location of the egg
- It takes many sperm to penetrate the follicle cell layer and coating called the zona pellucida
They absorb some of the sugar in semen
Inside one of the Fallopian tubes
A protective glycoprotein layer that surrounds the egg.
- They release hydrolytic enzymes from their acrosomes to help break down the zona pellucida
- Cortical granules are released immediately after one sperm binds itself to the egg's plasma membrane, they release enzymes which the change the zona pellucida to prevent more sperm from entering the egg
- This ensures that polyspermy is avoided
Only the nucleus- the flagellum and mitochondria are destroyed by vesicles released from the egg
- It involves exocytosis: the release of digestive enzymes from the acrosome of the sperm which allows sperm to penetrate the zona pellucida
- The nuclei (containing the maternal and paternal sets of chromosomes) remain seperate initially
- They are haploid and called pronuclei. While in the pronuclei stage, the DNA undergoes replication in preperation for mitosis
- The two pronucli then come together and the nuclear membranes dissolve
- A spindle apparatus forms as the chromosomes prepare for the first mitotic division of the newly formed diploid cell
- It takes about 30 hrs after fertilization for this first mitotic division to be completed
A cap-liked organelle on the top of the head of a sperm cell that contains enzymes essential for fertilization
To provide motility, or movement, allowing it to propel itself to reach and fertilize the egg
30 hrs
- Too many chromosomes from the male will disrupt cell division and development
- Combination of abnormal chromosomes and disrupted cell division prevents the embroyo from developing correctly, leading to embroyonic death
