Results 81 to 90 of about 2,750 (119)
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Activation of follicle development: the primordial follicle

Theriogenology, 2001
Investigations of primordial follicle formation and growth are fundamental to our understanding of female gamete production. In all mammalian females the full complement of oocytes is established during fetal development. This store of primordial follicles is not renewable and serves the entire reproductive life span of the adult.
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Regulators of Ovarian Preantral Follicle Development

Seminars in Reproductive Medicine, 2015
Preantral follicle development has become an increasingly recognized area of study in the last two decades. Factors that regulate the growth survival and differentiation of these small, yet complex structures have been identified. The field of fertility preservation and a need for increased numbers of mature oocytes for stem cell research revealed how ...
Elizabeth A, McGee, Renju S, Raj
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Mybs in mouse hair follicle development

Tissue and Cell, 2014
The Myb transcription factors are involved in essential cellular processes, such as cell proliferation, differentiation and cell death. Biological functions carried out by specific Myb proteins are distinct. Hair follicles are ectodermal-derived organs with cycling character of the growth resulting from the presence of somatic stem cells. In this study,
B, Veselá   +3 more
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Follicle Development in Vitro

2004
Abstract The mammalian ovary is endowed by birth or shortly after with a lifetime supply of oocytes. These oocytes are surrounded by somatic cells (forming ovarian follicles) and separated from the interstitial tissue and from each other by a basement membrane.
Norah Spears   +2 more
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Follicle Development in the Australian Merino

Nature, 1953
So far as we are aware, there is no published information of a quantitative nature on the post-natal development of the follicle population in the skin of the merino sheep, although Carter and Hardy1 have presented quantitative data for the pre-natal period.
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Follicle development during the normal menstrual cycle

Maturitas, 1998
An understanding of the factors which determine initiation of follicle growth, recruitment and dominant follicle selection may increase our understanding of the underlying process of ovarian aging. In this article, these aspects of the normal menstrual cycle are reviewed.
Macklon, N.S., Fauser, B.C.
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Dynamics of Human Follicle Development

1993
In 1979 the first report appeared on follicular growth during the normal menstrual cycle as determined by ultrasonography (1). Only cystic structures above 10 mm in size were regarded as follicles. During the days before the luteinizing hormone (LH) peak, follicle size and serum estradiol levels were strongly correlated. It was also noticed that growth
Bart C. J. M. Fauser   +2 more
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Angiogenesis in Developing Follicle and Corpus Luteum

Reproduction in Domestic Animals, 2004
ContentsAngiogenesis is a process of vascular growth that is mainly limited to the reproductive system in healthy adult animals. The development of new blood vessels in the ovary is essential to guarantee the necessary supply of nutrients and hormones to promote follicular growth and corpus luteum formation.
TAMANINI, CARLO, DE AMBROGI, MARCO
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Extracellular Matrix and Follicle Development

2003
http://trove.nla.gov.au/work ...
Rodgers, R., Irving-Rodgers, H.
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Aspects of Ovarian Follicle Development throughout Life

Hormone Research in Paediatrics, 1999
The pool of primordial follicles present in the female ovary reaches its maximum number around 20 weeks of gestational age and then decreases in a logarithmic fashion throughout life until complete depletion occurs around the age of the menopause. Reproductive life is initiated when less than 10% (0.5 million) of primordial follicles are left.
Macklon, N. S., Fauser, B. C. J. M.
openaire   +3 more sources

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