reprodUCtIVe systeMs 315
fertilization Fusion of the
nuclei of an egg and a
sperm.
ovum A mature egg.
zygote The first cell of a
new individual.
What is the role of fertiliZation in
reproduction?
- At fertilization, a sperm’s nucleus fuses with the nucleus of
an egg cell. The result is a zygote, a single cell with a full set of
chromosomes—half from the mother and half from the father.
taKe-hoMe Message
Fusion with a sperm prompts
the completion of the cell division
process that began when the oocyte
was being formed in an ovary (Sec-
tion 16.2). The result is a mature egg,
or ovum (plural: ova), plus another
polar body. (Recall from Section 16.2
that one or two polar bodies are
produced in the cell division step that gives rise to the
secondary oocyte. Often three tiny polar bodies eventually
are packaged with the ovum.) The nuclei of the sperm and
ovum swell up, then fuse.
Each sperm and oocyte has 23 chromosomes, half the
number in other body cells. Fertilization combines them
into a full set of 46 chromosomes. Thus a zygote has all the
DNA required to guide development of the embryo.
n Fertilization combines the genetic material in a male’s
sperm with that in a female’s egg.
Fertilization is the fusion of an egg cell’s nucleus and a
sperm’s nucleus. It begins when a sperm enters a secondary
oocyte. After several steps, fertilization produces a zygote
(zye-goat, “yoked together”), the first cell of the new indi-
vidual. Figure 16.10 shows these steps.
As sperm swim through the cervix and uterus and into
the oviducts, capacitation occurs. In this process, chemical
changes weaken the membrane over the sperm’s acrosome.
Only a sperm that is capacitated (“made able”) can ferti lize
an oocyte. Of the millions of sperm in the vagina after an
ejaculation, just several hundred reach the upper part of an
oviduct, where fertilization usually occurs. Contractions
of smooth muscle in the uterus help move sperm toward
the oviducts.
When a capacitated sperm contacts an oocyte, enzymes
are released from the now-weakened membrane over the
acrosome. These enzymes clear a path through the zona
pellucida. Many sperm can reach and bind to the oocyte.
Usually, however, only one sperm fuses with the oocyte.
Rapid chemical changes in the oocyte’s cell membrane pre-
vent more sperm from entering.
Fertilization
egg and
sperm nuclei
zona
pellucida
follicle
cell
oocyte
nucleus
zona
pellucida
Fertilization
Ovulation
oviduct
ovary
uterus
opening
of cervix
vagina
A Fertilization most often
occurs in the oviduct. Many
sperm swim through the
vagina into oviducts
(blue arrows).
Inside an oviduct, the sperm
surround a secondary oocyte
that was released by ovulation.
B Enzymes released from the cap of each sperm
clear a path through the zona pellucida. Penetration
of the secondary oocyte by a sperm causes the
oocyte to release substances that prevent other
sperm from binding.
C The oocyte completes meiosis II.
The sperm’s tail and other organelles
degenerate.
Later, the egg and sperm nuclei will
fuse and the zygote will form.
Figure 16.10 Animated! Fertilization unites a sperm and oocyte. (A, B: © Cengage Learning; C: Courtesy of Elizabeth Sanders, Women’s Specialty, Jackson, MS)
16.6
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