Ovaries: differentiation
The differentiation of the ovaries happens later than that of the testes, taking place during the 8th week (stages 20 - 23). Since females lack the Y chromosome, they have no SRY gene, except when a translocation of the gene onto the X chromosome occurs!
Histologically two regions can be distinguished in an ovary:
- Cortex, containing all the elements of the parenchyma
- Medulla, which shares the elements of the stroma with the cortex
Development of the stroma
In an ovary the majority of the gonadal cords stay in contact with the surface coelomic epithelium. Those gonadal cords that go into the depths out of the thickened coelomic epithelium and lose contact with it atrophy. One also suspects there are signals from the ovary, though, which actively prevent the differentiation into male gonads. So, for example, WNT-4 functions partly as an anti-testis gene in that it suppresses certain developmental steps of differentiation in the direction of the testes.
Development of the parenchyma
Towards the end of the embryonic period one can distinguish the cortex with its gonadal cords and the medullar PGC in the ovary. Although one often finds in the literature that cells with a mesonephric origin are also present in the ovarian stroma, examinations made on mice ovaries have shown that no cells migrate out of the mesonephros into the ovary (in contrast with myofibroblasts of the testis). Probably the cells of the mesonephros only reach the hilus area of the ovary and participate there in the weakly formed rete ovarii.
In the course of the 4th month the gonadal cords dissolve - also in the cortex - due to blood vessels that are sprouting from the medulla and isolated cell accumulations surround the oogonia that increasingly divide synchronously (mitosis). Like the spermatogonia the oogonia form similar cell clones. The individual cells are connected with each other via cellular bridges. One can now distinguish various zones in the cortex: In the outermost zone proliferating oogonia are found; somewhat further inward one recognizes oocytes that have spontaneously entered into the prophase of the first meiosis (meiosis 1).
From the 5th month a third zone becomes visible towards the medulla in which the oocytes have already completed the prophase of the first meiosis and are surrounded by a monolayer of cells that have differentiated out of the gonadal cord cells and now are now called follicle or granulosa cells. The primary oocytes that are enveloped by follicle cells are now designated primordial follicles and then remain in this stage of the first meiosis (dictyotene stage).
During the early fetal period millions of primordial follicles arise through intensive mitotic divisions of the oogonia (the follicle stages from primordial follicle to tertiary follicle).
The supply of primordial follicles decreases slightly before birth, and to 500,000 by puberty for the average case (populations at puberty range from 25,000 to 1.5 million). Of these only ca. 300 primary oocytes develop further between puberty and menopause into fertilizable oocytes.
It is to be noted that follicles only form in the presence of the PGC. Without them, sterile gonadal cords are formed that then further degenerate and as a consequence the ovary then consists only of stroma.
Phase A:
A migration of the PGC into the genital ridge where they mitotically multiply through contact with the coelomic epithelium. Formation of the gonadal cords that partially degenerate (weeks 6-7).
Phase B:
Active proliferation phase of the PGC and differentiation into oogonia (weeks 9 – 22). The maximal number of PGC (7 million) is attained with 20 weeks.
Phase C:
The oogonia enter spontaneously into meiosis and become arrested in the diplotene of the prophase of the first meiosis. One now designates them as primary oocytes (weeks 12-25).
Phase D:
Formation of primordial follicles (weeks 16 -29).
Phase E:
Progressing follicular atresia from the 16th week on. Between 300,000 and 2 million primordial follicles remain up to birth and of these ca. 300 primordial follicles develop further between puberty and menopause, in order to let fertilizable oocytes arise. The majority of the follicles thus perish along the way.
Summary
The development of the ovary is characterized by the following:
- Gonadal cords remain in existence only near the cortex; in the medulla they atrophy. The rete ovarii is only rudimentarily developed. Its cells probably come from the mesonephros, but a connection between the rete testis and the mesonephros never comes into existence.
- Cortical gonadal cords separate themselves from the others in order to make isolated cell accumulations around the oocytes and thus to form the primordial follicles.
- Coelomic epithelium, out of which a simple cubic ovarian epithelium (synonym: ovarian mesothelium) arises.