558 MHR • Appendix 4
are produced that help the early embryo orient
and develop as it grows. Once stimulated,
meiosis I continues and one small polar body
is produced. This polar body contains one set
of duplicated chromosomes and very little
cytoplasm. The oocyte continues through
meiosis II and stops at metaphase II until it is
fertilized. Fertilization by a sperm cell, and the
arrival of the sperm pronucleus, lead to an
increase of calcium inside the oocyte. This
stimulates the oocyte to complete meiosis,
producing one haploid pronucleus and a
second polar body at the other centrosome pole.
The zygote has two pronuclei that move
directly to the S phase. Since the egg stored
quantities of mRNA and key proteins, the early
embryo skips phases G 1 and G 2 and alternates
between the S phase and M phase during
mitotic cleavage. As the two pronuclei prepare
for their first M stage, their membranes
disintegrate and the chromosomes merge to
form the nucleus of the new individual.
growth of oocyte
hormones
synapsis of
homologues
preparation for
metaphase I
meiosis begins
metaphase I
first polar body
second
polar body
preparation for
metaphase II
stasis until
fertilization
fertilization
pronuclei prepare
for mitosis
chromatids
separate
contains one
copy of each
homologue
male pronucleus
enters egg
Figure A4.4 Oogenesis is a specialized form of meiosis. Cytoplasm is not evenly
distributed. Hormones initiate meiosis, which arrests in metaphase II. Meiosis is
completed after fertilization.