A sperm that fertilizes an egg carries its mitochondria into the egg’s cytoplasm
ID: 266055 • Letter: A
Question
A sperm that fertilizes an egg carries its mitochondria into the egg’s cytoplasm. However, male-derived mitochondrial nucleoids have completely disappeared within 60 min after fertilization. This experimental observation is most likely due to ________________.
a) The “bottle-neck” inheritance of mitochondria.'
b) The degradation of mitochondrial proteins.
c) The degradation of mitochondrial DNA.
d) The dilution of male-derived mitochondria in the egg’s cytoplasm.
e) The incompatibility of male and female mitochondria.
I chose answer c) The degradation of mitochondrial DNA but my TA told me that the answer was wrong. Was I wrong or was the TA wrong and my answer was actually right? Please explain the answer to me so that I can understand the concept and definitively know what the correct answer is.
Explanation / Answer
The correct answer would be:d) The dilution of male-derived mitochondria in the egg’s cytoplasm.
Reason:The sperm being small in size in comparision to the egg,there occurs a simple dilution of the paternal mitochondria as a result of which limited paternal mitochondria is transmitted to the offsprings.This is also known as simple dilution model according to which the paternal mitochondria DNA being present at a much lower copy number is simply diluted by excess of mitochondrial DNA of the oocyte and therefore is hardly detectable in the offspring.
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