| 1. | It forms the hyaline layer which covers the surface of the egg after insemination.
|
| 2. | As stated before, the hyaline layer coats the external surface of an embryo.
|
| 3. | Hyalin has a secondary effect of aiding with polyspermy when in the hyaline layer.
|
| 4. | A gel like layer results, and the hyaline layer is formed around the egg.
|
| 5. | An outer layer that makes them fluorescent green under ultraviolet light is called the hyaline layer.
|
| 6. | The hyaline layer grows to be about 2 3 mm thick within fifteen minutes after insemination.
|
| 7. | Should the fertilization envelope not form or dissociate, the hyaline layer alone blocks against polyspermy.
|
| 8. | The fluorescent hyaline layer can be intact in fossil rocks that are hundreds of millions of years old.
|
| 9. | The microvilli which secure PMCs to the hyaline layer shorten, as the cells reduce their affinity for the extraembryonic matrix.
|
| 10. | Underneath the fertilization envelope is the hyaline layer, which covers up sperm receptors in the egg's plasma membrane.
|