Pronuclei - meaning and definition. What is Pronuclei
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What (who) is Pronuclei - definition

THE NUCLEUS OF EITHER THE OVUM OR THE SPERMATOZOON FOLLOWING FERTILIZATION. THUS, IN THE FERTILIZED OVUM, THERE ARE TWO PRONUCLEI, ONE ORIGINATING FROM THE OVUM, THE OTHER FROM THE SPERMATOZOON THAT BROUGHT ABOUT FERTILIZATION; THEY APPROACH EACH OTH
Pronuclei; Male pronucleus; Female pronucleus; Egg nucleus; Sperm nucleus; 2PN; Two-pronuclear zygote; Pronuclear
  • The process of fertilization in the ovum of a mouse

Pronuclei         
·pl of Pronucleus.
Pronucleus         
·noun One of the two bodies or nuclei (called male and female pronuclei) which unite to form the first segmentation nucleus of an impregnated ovum.
Pronucleus         
A pronucleus () is the nucleus of a sperm or egg cell during the process of fertilization. The sperm cell becomes a pronucleus after the sperm enters the ovum, but before the genetic material of the sperm and egg fuse.

Wikipedia

Pronucleus

A pronucleus (PL pronuclei) is the nucleus of a sperm or egg cell during the process of fertilization. The sperm cell becomes a pronucleus after the sperm enters the ovum, but before the genetic material of the sperm and egg fuse. Contrary to the sperm cell, the egg cell has a pronucleus once it becomes haploid, and not when the sperm cell arrives. Sperm and egg cells are haploid, meaning they carry half the number of chromosomes of somatic cells, so in humans, haploid cells have 23 chromosomes, while somatic cells have 46 chromosomes. The male and female pronuclei do not fuse, although their genetic material does. Instead, their membranes dissolve, leaving no barriers between the male and female chromosomes. Their chromosomes can then combine and become part of a single diploid nucleus in the resulting embryo, containing a full set of chromosomes.

The appearance of two pronuclei is the first sign of successful fertilization as observed during in vitro fertilisation, and is usually observed 18 hours after insemination or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). The zygote is then termed a two-pronuclear zygote (2PN). Two-pronuclear zygotes transitioning through 1PN or 3PN states tend to develop into poorer-quality embryos than ones who remain 2PN throughout development, and may be significant in embryo selection in in vitro fertilisation (IVF).

Examples of use of Pronuclei
1. At the point of fertilisation, two pronuclei containing genetic material from the mother and father will be removed, and injected into an unfertilised egg from which the nucleus has been removed.