A pre-Dynkin system is a set system $\mathcal D \subset \wp(\Omega)$ which contains $\Omega$ and is closed under complements and finite disjoint unions. Is it true that the monotone class generated by $\mathcal D$ equals the Dynkin system generated by $\mathcal D$,
$$ m(\mathcal D) = d(\mathcal D)? $$ (Here $m(\mathcal D)$ denote the the smallest monotone class containing a collection of sets $\mathcal D \subset \wp(\Omega)$ and $d(\mathcal D)$ denotes the smallest Dynkin system containing $\mathcal D$. A Dynkin system, also called $\lambda$-system, contains $\Omega$ and is closed under complements and countable disjoint unions.)
Commentary: I seem to be able to prove that 1.) $m(\mathcal D)$ is closed under complements, and 2.) the smallest system closed under countable increasing unions that contains $\mathcal D$ is stable under disjoint unions.
Context: The question is motivated by the monotone class theorem for sets (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monotone_class_theorem). A monotone class is a collection of sets closed under taking unions of sequences of increasing sets and taking intersections of sequences of decreasing sets. The theorem says that if $\mathcal A$ is a field/algebra, then $m(\mathcal A) = \sigma(\mathcal A)$, i.e. the monotone class generated by $\mathcal A$ coincides with the $\sigma$-field generated by $\mathcal A$.