enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Oocyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oocyte

    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, forming oogonia. During oogenesis, the oogonia become primary oocytes. An oocyte is a form of genetic material that can be collected for cryoconservation.

  3. 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.

  4. Folliculogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folliculogenesis

    Until the preovulatory stage, the follicle contains a primary oocyte that is arrested in prophase of meiosis I. During the late preovulatory stage, the oocyte continues meiosis and becomes a secondary oocyte, arrested in metaphase II. (a) The maturation of a follicle is shown in a clockwise direction proceeding from the primordial follicles.

  5. Immature ovum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immature_ovum

    The primary oocyte is defined by its process of ootidogenesis, which is meiosis. [2] It has duplicated its DNA, so that each chromosome has two chromatids, i.e. 92 chromatids all in all (4C). When meiosis I is completed, one secondary oocyte and one polar body is created. Primary oocytes have been created in late fetal life.

  6. 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 ...

  7. Germ cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germ_cell

    Oocyte maturation is the following phase of oocyte development. It occurs at sexual maturity when hormones stimulate the oocyte to complete meiotic division I. The meiotic division I produces 2 cells differing in size: a small polar body and a large secondary oocyte.

  8. Development of the gonads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Development_of_the_gonads

    Development proceeds and the oogonia become fully surrounded by a layer of connective tissue cells (pre-granulosa cells) in an irregular manner. In this way, the rudiments of the ovarian follicles are formed. During oogenesis, the oogonia become primary oocytes.

  9. Oogonium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oogonium

    Oogonia proliferate via mitosis during the 9th to 22nd week of embryonic development. There can be up to 600,000 oogonia by the 8th week of development and up to 7,000,000 by the 5th month. [3] Eventually, the oogonia will either degenerate or further differentiate into primary oocytes through asymmetric division.