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Polar body

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Polar body is a cell structure found inside an ovum. Both animal and plant ova possess it.

Asymetrical cell division (cytokinesis) leads to the production of polar bodies during oogenesis. To conserve nutrients, the majority of cytoplasm is segretated into either the secondary oocyte or ovum, during meiosis I or meiosis II, respectively. The remaining daughter cells generated from the meiotic events contain relatively little cytoplasm and are referred to as polar bodies. Eventually, the polar bodies degenerate.

There may be either one or two inside the ovum, usually two. During meiosis, an oocyte divides, of which one will continue to develop into an ovum, the others becoming polar bodies. The first polar body comprises one of the two products in the first stage of meiosis and is haploid, but since each chromosome still has two chromatids, it has twice as much DNA as the second polar body. Both are relatively small and contain little cytoplasm. This second polar body can potentially result in half-identical twins, when the second polar body does not disintegrate and is fertilized by a sperm.

In plants, the pollen releases two male gametes into the ovule upon fertilization. One fertilizes the haploid ovum and develops into a normal embryo, while the other fertilizes the two polar bodies within the center of the ovary, creating a structure called endosperm. Endosperm stores nutrients for initial growth of plant seeds. Cereal grain is an example of this, and is consumed for its nutritional value by most animals including humans.

 


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