Abstract

Pig embryos aged 26-27 days were used for an ultrastructural study of the early ovary and testis. Sex was identified by both chromosomal analysis and gonadal histology, with consistent results. The gonads occupied their original site in the medial coelomic angles in both sexes. The female gonad was composed of three tissues: the surface epithelium, the gonadal blastema and the mesenchyme. The gonadal structure was similar to that seen earlier at the age of 24 days. At 26 days the testis had distinctly differentiated into four tissues. The new components were the testicular cords and the interstitium, both derived from the gonadal blastema. The testicular cords resembled anastomosing sheets more than cords. The ultrastructure of the tissues and their cell types are described and compared to the previous indifferent stage at the age of 24 days. The cells of the surface epithelium, of the primitive cords, of the mesenchyme, and the primordial germ cells had an ultrastructure that was similar in both sexes. The sustentacular cells of the testicular cords resembled the primitive cord cells and the spermatogonia were similar to the primordial germ cells. No Leydig cells were present yet. The process of testicular differentiation is described on the basis of the present and a previous study, and a new hypothesis, based on the vascular organization, is presented.

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