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Fertilisation or fertilization (see spelling differences), also known as generative fertilisation, syngamy and impregnation, is the fusion of to give rise to a and initiate its development into a new individual organism or offspring. While processes such as or , which happen before the fusion of gametes, are also sometimes informally referred to as fertilisation, these are technically separate processes. The cycle of fertilisation and development of new individuals is called sexual reproduction. During double fertilisation in , the male gamete combines with two haploid to form a primary nucleus by the process of vegetative fertilisation.


History
In antiquity, conceived the formation of new individuals through fusion of male and female fluids, with form and function emerging gradually, in a mode called by him as epigenetic.
(2025). 9783319532578

In 1784, established the need of interaction between the female's ovum and male's sperm to form a zygote in frogs. In 1827, Karl Ernst von Baer observed a mammalian egg for the first time. (1876), in Germany, described the fusion of nuclei of spermatozoa and of ova from .

(2025). 9780123725684


Evolution
The evolution of fertilisation is related to the origin of meiosis, as both are part of sexual reproduction, originated in . One hypothesis states that originated from mitosis.


Fertilisation in plants
The gametes that participate in fertilisation of plants are the sperm (male) and the egg (female) cell. Various plant groups have differing methods by which the gametes produced by the male and female come together and are fertilised. In and land plants, fertilisation of the sperm and egg takes place within the . In , the male gametophyte is formed within a grain. After , the grain germinates, and a grows and penetrates the through a tiny pore called a . The sperm are transferred from the pollen through the pollen tube to the ovule where the egg is fertilised. In , two sperm cells are released from the pollen tube, and a second fertilisation event occurs involving the second sperm cell and the of the ovule, which is a second female gamete.
(1999). 9783642599699, Springer.


Pollen tube growth
Unlike animal sperm which is motile, the sperm of most seed plants is immotile and relies on the to carry it to the ovule where the sperm is released. The pollen tube penetrates the stigma and elongates through the extracellular matrix of the style before reaching the ovary. Then near the receptacle, it breaks through the through the micropyle (an opening in the ovule wall) and the pollen tube "bursts" into the embryo sac, releasing sperm. The growth of the pollen tube has been believed to depend on chemical cues from the pistil, however these mechanisms were poorly understood until 1995. Work done on revealed a family of called TTS proteins that enhanced growth of pollen tubes. Pollen tubes in a sugar free pollen germination medium and a medium with purified TTS proteins both grew. However, in the TTS medium, the tubes grew at a rate 3x that of the sugar-free medium. TTS proteins were also placed on various locations of semi pollinated pistils, and pollen tubes were observed to immediately extend toward the proteins. Transgenic plants lacking the ability to produce TTS proteins had slower pollen tube growth and reduced fertility.


Rupture of pollen tube
The rupture of the pollen tube to release sperm in has been shown to depend on a signal from the female gametophyte. Specific proteins called FER protein kinases present in the ovule control the production of highly reactive derivatives of oxygen called reactive oxygen species (ROS). ROS levels have been shown via GFP to be at their highest during floral stages when the ovule is the most receptive to pollen tubes, and lowest during times of development and following fertilisation. High amounts of ROS activate Calcium ion channels in the pollen tube, causing these channels to take up Calcium ions in large amounts. This increased uptake of calcium causes the pollen tube to rupture, and release its sperm into the ovule. Pistil feeding assays in which plants were fed diphenyl iodonium chloride (DPI) suppressed ROS concentrations in Arabidopsis, which in turn prevented pollen tube rupture.


Flowering plants
After being fertilised, the ovary starts to swell and develop into the .
(2025). 9780199147663, Oxford University Press. .
With multi-seeded fruits, multiple grains of pollen are necessary for syngamy with each ovule. The growth of the pollen tube is controlled by the vegetative (or tube) cytoplasm. Hydrolytic are secreted by the pollen tube that digest the female tissue as the tube grows down the stigma and style; the digested tissue is used as a nutrient source for the pollen tube as it grows. During pollen tube growth towards the ovary, the generative nucleus divides to produce two separate sperm nuclei (haploid number of chromosomes)
(2025). 9780470057230, John Wiley.
– a growing pollen tube therefore contains three separate nuclei, two sperm and one tube.
(1975). 9780394310930, CRM. .
The sperms are interconnected and dimorphic, the large one, in a number of plants, is also linked to the tube nucleus and the interconnected sperm and the tube nucleus form the "male germ unit".
(2025). 9783540277910, Springer-Verlag. .

Double fertilisation is the process in (flowering plants) in which two from each pollen tube fertilise two cells in a female (sometimes called an embryo sac) that is inside an ovule. After the pollen tube enters the gametophyte, the pollen tube nucleus disintegrates and the two sperm cells are released; one of the two sperm cells fertilises the egg cell (at the bottom of the gametophyte near the micropyle), forming a (2n) . This is the point when fertilisation actually occurs; pollination and fertilisation are two separate processes. The nucleus of the other sperm cell fuses with two haploid polar nuclei (contained in the central cell) in the centre of the gametophyte. The resulting cell is (3n). This triploid cell divides through and forms the , a -rich tissue, inside the . The two central-cell maternal nuclei (polar nuclei) that contribute to the endosperm arise by mitosis from the single meiotic product that also gave rise to the egg. Therefore, maternal contribution to the genetic constitution of the triploid endosperm is double that of the embryo.

One primitive species of flowering plant, , has endosperm that is diploid, resulting from the fusion of a sperm with one, rather than two, maternal nuclei. It is believed that early in the development of angiosperm lineages, there was a duplication in this mode of reproduction, producing seven-celled/eight-nucleate female gametophytes, and triploid endosperms with a 2:1 maternal to paternal genome ratio.

In many plants, the development of the flesh of the fruit is proportional to the percentage of fertilised ovules. For example, with , about a thousand grains of pollen must be delivered and spread evenly on the three lobes of the stigma to make a normal sized and shaped fruit.


Self-pollination and outcrossing
, or cross-fertilisation, and represent different strategies with differing benefits and costs. An estimated 48.7% of plant species are either dioecious or self-incompatible obligate outcrossers. It is also estimated that about 42% of flowering plants exhibit a mixed mating system in nature.

In the most common kind of mixed mating system, individual plants produce a single type of flower and fruits may contain self-fertilised, outcrossed or a mixture of progeny types. The transition from cross-fertilisation to self-fertilisation is the most common evolutionary transition in plants, and has occurred repeatedly in many independent lineages. About 10-15% of flowering plants are predominantly self-fertilising.

Under circumstances where or mates are rare, self-fertilisation offers the advantage of reproductive assurance. Self-fertilisation can therefore result in improved colonisation ability. In some species, self-fertilisation has persisted over many generations. is a self-fertilising species that became self-compatible 50,000 to 100,000 years ago. Arabidopsis thaliana is a predominantly self-fertilising plant with an rate in the wild of less than 0.3%; a study suggested that self-fertilisation evolved roughly a million years ago or more in A. thaliana. In long-established self-fertilising plants, the masking of deleterious and the production of genetic variability is infrequent and thus unlikely to provide a sufficient benefit over many generations to maintain the meiotic apparatus. Consequently, one might expect self-fertilisation to be replaced in nature by an ameiotic asexual form of reproduction that would be less costly. However the actual persistence of meiosis and self-fertilisation as a form of reproduction in long-established self-fertilising plants may be related to the immediate benefit of efficient recombinational repair of DNA damage during formation of germ cells provided by meiosis at each generation.


Fertilisation in animals
The mechanics behind fertilisation has been studied extensively in sea urchins and mice. This research addresses the question of how the and the appropriate egg find each other and the question of how only one sperm gets into the egg and delivers its contents. There are three steps to fertilisation that ensure species-specificity:

  1. Chemotaxis
  2. Sperm activation/acrosomal reaction
  3. Sperm/egg adhesion


Internal vs. external
Consideration as to whether an animal (more specifically a vertebrate) uses internal or external fertilisation is often dependent on the method of birth. animals laying eggs with thick calcium shells, such as , or thick leathery shells generally reproduce via internal fertilisation so that the sperm fertilises the egg without having to pass through the thick, protective, tertiary layer of the egg. and animals also use internal fertilisation. Although some organisms reproduce via , they may still use internal fertilisation, as with some salamanders. Advantages of internal fertilisation include minimal waste of gametes, greater chance of individual egg fertilisation, longer period of egg protection, and selective fertilisation. Many females have the ability to store sperm for extended periods of time and can fertilise their eggs at their own desire.

Oviparous animals producing eggs with thin tertiary membranes or no membranes at all, on the other hand, use external fertilisation methods. Such animals may be more precisely termed ovuliparous.

(2025). 9782100057399, Dunod.
External fertilisation is advantageous in that it minimises contact (which decreases the risk of disease transmission), and greater genetic variation.


Sea urchins
Sperm find the eggs via , a type of ligand/receptor interaction. Resact is a 14 amino acid peptide purified from the jelly coat of A. punctulata that attracts the migration of sperm.

After finding the egg, the sperm penetrates the through a process called sperm activation. In another ligand/receptor interaction, an oligosaccharide component of the egg binds and activates a receptor on the sperm and causes the acrosomal reaction. The acrosomal vesicles of the sperm fuse with the plasma membrane and are released. In this process, molecules bound to the acrosomal vesicle membrane, such as bindin, are exposed on the surface of the sperm. These contents digest the jelly coat and eventually the vitelline membrane. In addition to the release of acrosomal vesicles, there is explosive polymerisation of to form a thin spike at the head of the sperm called the acrosomal process.

The sperm binds to the egg through another ligand reaction between receptors on the vitelline membrane. The sperm surface protein bindin, binds to a receptor on the vitelline membrane identified as EBR1.

Fusion of the plasma membranes of the sperm and egg are likely mediated by bindin. At the site of contact, fusion causes the formation of a fertilisation cone.


Mammals
Male internally fertilise females and through the during copulation.
(1992). 9780226870137, University of Chicago Press. .
(2020). 9780128207260, Academic Press. .
After ejaculation, many sperm move to the upper vagina (via contractions from the vagina) through the and across the length of the to meet the ovum. In cases where fertilisation occurs, the female usually during a period that extends from hours before copulation to a few days after; therefore, in most mammals, it is more common for ejaculation to precede ovulation than vice versa.

When sperm are deposited into the anterior vagina, they are not capable of fertilisation (i.e., non-capacitated) and are characterised by slow linear motility patterns. This motility, combined with muscular contractions enables sperm transport towards the uterus and . There is a pH gradient within the micro-environment of the female reproductive tract such that the pH near the vaginal opening is lower (approximately 5) than the oviducts (approximately 8). The sperm-specific pH-sensitive calcium transport protein called CatSper increases the sperm cell permeability to calcium as it moves further into the reproductive tract. Intracellular calcium influx contributes to sperm capacitation and hyperactivation, causing a more violent and rapid non-linear motility pattern as sperm approach the oocyte. The spermatozoon and the oocyte meet and interact in the ampulla of the . Rheotaxis, thermotaxis and chemotaxis are known mechanisms that guide sperm towards the egg during the final stage of sperm migration. Spermatozoa respond (see Sperm thermotaxis) to the temperature gradient of ~2 °C between the oviduct and the ampulla, and chemotactic gradients of have been confirmed as the signal emanating from the cells surrounding rabbit and human oocytes. Capacitated and hyperactivated sperm respond to these gradients by changing their behaviour and moving towards the cumulus-oocyte complex. Other chemotactic signals such as formyl Met-Leu-Phe (fMLF) may also guide spermatozoa.

The , a thick layer of extracellular matrix that surrounds the egg and is similar to the role of the vitelline membrane in sea urchins, binds the sperm. Unlike sea urchins, the sperm binds to the egg before the acrosomal reaction. ZP3, a glycoprotein in the zona pellucida, is responsible for egg/sperm adhesion in humans. The receptor galactosyltransferase (GalT) binds to the N-acetylglucosamine residues on the ZP3 and is important for binding with the sperm and activating the acrosome reaction. ZP3 is sufficient though unnecessary for sperm/egg binding. Two additional sperm receptors exist: a 250kD protein that binds to an oviduct secreted protein, and SED1, which independently binds to the zona. After the acrosome reaction, the sperm is believed to remain bound to the zona pellucida through exposed ZP2 receptors. These receptors are unknown in mice but have been identified in guinea pigs.

In mammals, the binding of the spermatozoon to the GalT initiates the acrosome reaction. This process releases the that digests the matrix of in the vestments around the oocyte. Additionally, heparin-like glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are released near the oocyte that promote the acrosome reaction. Fusion between the oocyte and sperm follows and allows the sperm , the typical , and atypical that is attached to the , but not the , to enter the oocyte. The protein CD9 likely mediates this fusion in mice (the binding homolog). The egg "" itself upon fusing with a single sperm cell and thereby changes its cell membrane to prevent fusion with other sperm. atoms are released during this activation.

This process ultimately leads to the formation of a cell called a . The zygote divides to form a and, upon entering the uterus, implants in the endometrium, beginning . Embryonic implantation not in the wall results in an ectopic pregnancy that can kill the mother.

In such animals as rabbits, coitus induces ovulation by stimulating the release of the pituitary hormone gonadotropin; this release greatly increases the likelihood of pregnancy.


Humans
Fertilisation in humans is the union of a human and , usually occurring in the ampulla of the fallopian tube, producing a single celled , the first stage of life in the development of a genetically unique organism, and initiating embryonic development. Scientists discovered the dynamics of human fertilisation in the nineteenth century.

The term conception commonly refers to "the process of becoming pregnant involving fertilisation or implantation or both". Its use makes it a subject of semantic arguments about the beginning of pregnancy, typically in the context of the debate.

Upon , which occurs around 16 days after fertilisation, the implanted blastocyst develops three germ layers, the endoderm, the ectoderm and the mesoderm, and the genetic code of the father becomes fully involved in the development of the embryo; later twinning is impossible. Additionally, interspecies hybrids survive only until gastrulation and cannot further develop. However, some human developmental biology literature refers to the and such medical literature refers to the "products of conception" as the post-implantation embryo and its surrounding membranes.

(2025). 9780721669748, W. B. Saunders Company. .
The term "conception" is not usually used in scientific literature because of its variable definition and connotation.


Insects
Insects in different groups, including the ( and ) and the (, , and ) practise delayed fertilisation. Among the Odonata, females may mate with multiple males, and store sperm until the eggs are laid. The male may hover above the female during egg-laying (oviposition) to prevent her from mating with other males and replacing his sperm; in some groups such as the darters, the male continues to grasp the female with his claspers during egg-laying, the pair flying around in tandem.
(2025). 9780953139941, British Wildlife Publishing.
Among social Hymenoptera, queens mate only on mating flights, in a short period lasting some days; a queen may mate with eight or more drones. She then stores the sperm for the rest of her life, perhaps for five years or more.


Fertilisation in fungi
In many (except ), as in some protists, fertilisation is a two step process. First, the cytoplasms of the two gamete cells fuse (called ), producing a or cell with multiple nuclei. This cell may then divide to produce dikaryotic or heterokaryotic . The second step of fertilisation is , the fusion of the nuclei to form a diploid zygote.

In fungi, fertilisation occurs in a single step with the fusion of gametes, as in animals and plants.


Fertilisation in protists

Fertilisation in protozoa
There are three types of fertilisation processes in protozoa:
(2025). 9783540670933, Springer Science & Business Media.
  • gametogamy;
  • autogamy;Reproduction#Autogamy
  • gamontogamy.


Fertilisation in algae
Algae, like some land plants, undergo alternation of generations. Some algae are isomorphic, where both the sporophyte (2n) and gameteophyte (n) are the same morphologically. When algae reproduction is described as oogamous, the male and female gametes are different morphologically, where there is a large non-motile egg for female gametes, and the male gamete are uniflagellate (motile). Via the process of syngamy, these will form a new zygote, regenerating the sporophyte generation again.


Fertilisation and genetic recombination
results in a random segregation of the genes that each parent contributes. Each parent organism is usually identical save for a fraction of their genes; each is therefore genetically unique. At fertilisation, parental combine. In , (2²²)² = 17.6x1012 chromosomally different are possible for the non-sex chromosomes, even assuming no chromosomal crossover. If crossover occurs once, then on average (4²²)² = 309x1024 genetically different zygotes are possible for every couple, not considering that crossover events can take place at most points along each chromosome. The X and Y chromosomes undergo no crossover events and are therefore excluded from the calculation. The mitochondrial DNA is only inherited from the maternal parent.


The sperm aster and zygote centrosomes
Shortly after the sperm fuse with the egg, the two sperm form the embryo first and microtubule aster. The sperm centriole, found near the male pronucleus, recruit egg Pericentriolar material proteins forming the zygote first centrosome. This centrosome nucleates microtubules in the shape of stars called astral microtubules. The microtubules span the whole valium of the egg, allowing the egg pronucleus to use the cables to get to the male pronucleus. As the male and female pronuclei approach each other, the single centrosome split into two centrosomes located in the interphase between the pronuclei. Then the centrosome via the astral microtubules polarises the genome inside the pronuclei.


Parthenogenesis
Organisms that normally reproduce sexually can also reproduce via , wherein an unfertilised female gamete produces viable offspring. These offspring may be clones of the mother, or in some cases genetically differ from her but inherit only part of her DNA. Parthenogenesis occurs in many plants and animals and may be induced in others through a chemical or electrical stimulus to the egg cell. In 2004, Japanese researchers led by succeeded after 457 attempts to merge the of two mice by blocking certain proteins that would normally prevent the possibility; the resulting embryo normally developed into a mouse.


Allogamy and autogamy
, which is also known as cross-fertilisation, refers to the fertilisation of an egg cell from one individual with the male gamete of another.

Autogamy which is also known as self-fertilisation, occurs in such hermaphroditic organisms as plants and flatworms; therein, two gametes from one individual fuse.


Other variants of bisexual reproduction
Some relatively unusual forms of reproduction are:

: A sperm stimulates the egg to develop without fertilisation or syngamy. The sperm may enter the egg.

: One genome is eliminated to produce haploid eggs.

: (sometimes called "permanent odd polyploidy") one genome is transmitted in the Mendelian fashion, others are transmitted clonally.


Benefits of cross-fertilisation
The major benefit of cross-fertilisation is generally thought to be the avoidance of inbreeding depression. , in his 1876 book The Effects of Cross and Self Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom (pages 466-467) summed up his findings in the following way.
"It has been shown in the present volume that the offspring from the union of two distinct individuals, especially if their progenitors have been subjected to very different conditions, have an immense advantage in height, weight, constitutional vigour and fertility over the self-fertilised offspring from one of the same parents. And this fact is amply sufficient to account for the development of the sexual elements, that is, for the genesis of the two sexes."

In addition, it is thought by some, that a long-term advantage of out-crossing in nature is increased genetic variability that promotes adaptation or avoidance of extinction (see Genetic variability).


See also


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