Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to review, using fetal sheep as the animal model, aspects of ovarian development related to follicular formation and to report on the identity of growth and paracrine factors which might be involved in this process. Before follicular formation there is a massive and sustained colonisation of the fetal ovary by mesonephric cells, which become a precursor source of follicular cells. From within the ovarian medulla, somatic ‘cell-streams’ branch into the cortex around nests of oogonia and oocytes. These ‘cell-streams’, which contain elongated cells with either flattened or cuboidal shaped nuclei, express steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1), steroid acute regulatory protein (StAR), 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3β-HSD), cytochrome P450 scc, and P450 aromatase mRNA and/or protein. Follicles form from the association of an oocyte with the ‘cell-stream’ with either a single layer of flattened cells (i.e. type 1 follicle) or with a mixture of flattened and cuboidal cells (i.e. type 1a follicle). These newly-formed follicles have between 3 and 57 somatic cells (i.e. granulosa cells) and contain oocytes which vary in diameter between 23 and 52 μm. Newly formed and early growing follicles have been identified with growth factors or growth factor receptors in either the oocytes or granulosa cells. Many of the growth factors are from the TGFβ superfamily and are expressed in a cell- and stage-specific manner.
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