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  2. Oocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oocyte

    An oocyte (/ ˈ oʊ ə s aɪ t /, oöcyte, or ovocyte is a female gametocyte or germ cell involved in reproduction. In other words, it is an immature ovum, or egg cell. An oocyte is produced in a female fetus in the ovary during female gametogenesis. The female germ cells produce a primordial germ cell (PGC), which then undergoes mitosis ...

  3. Immature ovum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immature_ovum

    The secondary oocyte continues the second stage of meiosis (meiosis II), and the daughter cells are one ootid and one polar body. Secondary oocytes are the immature ovum shortly after ovulation, to fertilization, where it turns into an ootid. Thus, the time as a secondary oocyte is measured in days.

  4. Oogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oogenesis

    In fact, a primary oocyte is, by its biological definition, a cell whose primary function is to divide by the process of meiosis. [16] However, although this process begins at prenatal age, it stops at prophase I. In late fetal life, all oocytes, still primary oocytes, have halted at this stage of development, called the dictyate.

  5. Ovarian follicle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovarian_follicle

    Once the primary oocytes stop dividing the cells enter a prolonged 'resting phase'. This 'resting phase' or dictyate stage can last anywhere up to fifty years in the human. For several primary oocytes that complete meiosis I each month, only one or a few functional oocyte, the dominant follicles, completes maturation and undergoes ovulation ...

  6. Germline development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germline_development

    Mitotic germ stem cells, oogonia, divide by mitosis to produce primary oocytes committed to meiosis. Unlike sperm production, oocyte production is not continuous. These primary oocytes begin meiosis but pause in diplotene of meiosis I while in the embryo. All of the oogonia and many primary oocytes die before birth.

  7. Human reproductive system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_reproductive_system

    In contrast with males, each of the original diploid germ cells or primary oocytes will form only one mature ovum, and three polar bodies which are not capable of fertilization. It has long been understood that in females, unlike males, all the primary oocytes ever found in a female will be created prior to birth, and that the final stages of ...

  8. Germ cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germ_cell

    These cells differentiate into primary oocytes. In week 11-12 post coitus the first meiotic division begins (before birth for most mammals) and remains arrested in prophase I from a few days to many years depending on the species.

  9. Ovulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovulation

    Without the oocyte, the follicle folds inward on itself, transforming into the corpus luteum (pl. corpora lutea), a steroidogenic cluster of cells that produces estrogen and progesterone. These hormones induce the endometrial glands to begin production of the proliferative endometrium and later into secretory endometrium , the site of embryonic ...