In both males and females, the mesonephric ducts develop into the
trigone of urinary bladder, a part of the bladder wall, but the sexes differentiate in other ways during development of the
urinary and
reproductive organs.
Male In a
male, they develop into a system of connected organs between the
efferent ducts of the
testis and the prostate, namely the
epididymis, the
vas deferens, and the
seminal vesicle. The
prostate forms from the
urogenital sinus and the efferent ducts form from the
mesonephric tubules. For this, it is critical that the ducts are exposed to
testosterone during
embryogenesis. Testosterone binds to and activates
androgen receptor, affecting intracellular signals and modifying the expression of numerous genes. In the mature male, the function of this system is to store and mature
sperm, and provide accessory
semen fluid.The mesonephric duct (precursor of the male reproductive system) forms around the 3-4th week of pregnancy, present before the paramesonephric duct (precursor of the female reproductive system).
Female In the
female, with the absence of
anti-Müllerian hormone secretion by the
Sertoli cells and subsequent Müllerian
apoptosis, the mesonephric ducts regress, although inclusions may persist. The vestigial
epoophoron arises from these ducts. Also, lateral to the wall of the vagina, a
Gartner's duct could develop as a remnant. Normal regression starts with the action of
COUP-TFII in the Woffian mesenchyme. The mesonephric duct produces
WNT9B, which is required for the elongation of the Müllerian/paramesonephric ducts (this happens before sex specification). The
mesenchyme of the mesonephric duct is retained in female reproductive tissue after sexual differentiation. As the Woffian regresses, they undergo significant chromatin remodeling and move to surround the Müllerian. Cells from the Woffian mesenchyme occur in a layer around the inner epithelium, where the Müllerian mesenchyme cells also reside. The two can be distinguished by their gene expression profile: cells derived from the Woffian mesenchyme expresses
AR, while those from the Müllerian mesenchyme expresses
AMHR2. Both types of mesenchyme become smooth muscle and fibroblasts. They appear quite evenly mixed in the oviduct, but remain clearly separated the uterus, with the Woffian mesenchyme settling in the
mesometrial side. == Function ==