Origin and differentiation of the endocrine cells of the ovary

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Abstract

A large proportion of the somatic cells of the developing ovaries of mouse, human and rabbit stems from the mesonephric tissue. In the immature mouse ovary and in the 19-day-old fetal rabbit ovary, the first steroid-producing cells differentiate among the mesonephric-derived cells within the ovary. In the fetal human ovary, the first steroid-producing cells arise in the inner part of the cortex and differentiate concomitantly with the formation of small follicles. The origin of the early steroid-producing cells in the human ovary is still uncertain. During early ovarian development, formation and further differentiation of the steroid-producing interstitial cells seem to continue only in areas devoid of free viable germ cells.

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Byskov, A. G., Hoyer, P. E., & Westergaard, L. (1985). Origin and differentiation of the endocrine cells of the ovary. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility, 75(1), 299–306. https://doi.org/10.1530/jrf.0.0750299

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