409 Developmental Biology and Immunology Topic: Gastrulation Dr.Tabrez Ahmad

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

409 Developmental Biology and Immunology Topic: Gastrulation Dr.Tabrez Ahmad M.Sc.Semester III Paper -409 Developmental Biology and Immunology Topic: Gastrulation Dr.Tabrez Ahmad • The most characteristic event occurring during the third week of gestation is gastrulation. • Gastrulation is a formative process by which the three germ layers, which are precursors of all embryonic tissues, and the axial orientation, are established in embryos. • During gastrulation, the bilaminar embryonic disc is converted into a trilaminar embryonic disc. • Extensive cell shape changes, rearrangement, movement, and alterations in adhesive properties contribute to the process of gastrulation. • The embryo during this stage is called a gastrula. Process of Gastrulation • Gastrulation begins with the formation of the primitive streak on the surface of the epiblast. • Initially, the streak is vaguely defined, but in a 15- to a 16-day embryo, it is clearly visible as a narrow groove with slightly bulging regions on either side. • The cephalic end of the streak, the primitive node, consists of a slightly elevated area surrounding the small primitive pit. • Cells of the epiblast migrate toward the primitive streak. • Upon arrival in the region of the streak, they become fl ask-shaped, detach from the epiblast, and slip beneath it. This inward movement is known as invagination. • Once the cells have invaginated, some displace the hypoblast, creating the embryonic endoderm, and others come to lie between the epiblast and newly created endoderm to form mesoderm. • Cells remaining in the epiblast then form ectoderm. • Thus, the epiblast, through the process of gastrulation, is the source of all of the germ layers, and cells in these layers will give rise to all of the tissues and organs in the embryo. Each of the three germ layers (ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm) gives rise to specific tissues and organs: • Embryonic ectoderm gives rise to the epidermis, central and peripheral nervous systems, eyes and internal ears, neural crest cells, and many connective tissues of the head. • Embryonic endoderm is the source of the epithelial linings of the respiratory and alimentary (digestive) tracts, including the glands opening into the gastrointestinal tract, and glandular cells of associated organs such as the liver and pancreas. • Embryonic mesoderm gives rise to all skeletal muscles, blood cells, the lining of blood vessels, all visceral smooth muscular coats, serosal linings of all body cavities, ducts and organs of the reproductive and excretory systems, and most of the cardiovascular system. In the body (trunk or torso), excluding the head and limbs, it is the source of all connective tissues, including cartilage, bones, tendons, ligaments, dermis, and stroma (connective tissue) of internal organs. Factors controlling the process of Gastrulation • Cell migration and specific cation are controlled by fibroblast growth factor 8 (FGF8), which is synthesized by streak cells themselves. • This growth factor controls cell movement by down regulating E-cadherin, a protein that normally binds epiblast cells together. • FGF8 then controls cell specific cation into the mesoderm by regulating Brachyury (T) expression. Consequences Gastrulation results in three important outcomes: 1. The formation of the embryonic tissues called germ layers. The germ layers include the endoderm, ectoderm, and mesoderm. Each germ layer will later differentiate into different tissues and organ systems. 2. The formation of the embryonic gut or archenteron. 3. Gastrulation is the beginning of morphogenesis (development of body form). 4. The appearance of the major body axis. Types of Gastrula Gastrulation of a Coeloblastula A coeloblastula is a hollow ball of cells, one cell thick. Gastrulation in a blastula of this type involves invagination, ingression, or delamination. Invagination involves the blastula folding in on itself, creating a pocket with an opening. These are known as the archenteron and blastopore, and will become parts of the gut. The in-fold becomes the endoderm, while the outer later becomes the ectoderm. The resulting gastrula is known as a coelogastrula, because it remains hollow. This can be seen in the above image. The blastocoel is simply the empty space inside of the blastula. Coeloblastulae can also undergo a type of gastrulation that produces a solid gastrula, known as a stereogastrula. During this form of development, the cells of the blastula divide and migrate into the blastocoel, eventually filling the space. The movement of cells in this form of gastrulation is known as ingression. The cells on the inside will develop as endoderm, while the surface cells will develop as ectoderm. This can be seen in many cnidarians, such as sea anemones and jellyfish. The final form of gastrulation is called delamination, and exists when the cells of a coeloblastula each divide one, creating a layer of cells surrounding the original blastula. This form is seen in only in some groups related to jellyfish. Gastrulation of a Stereoblastula A stereoblastula is a blastula that exists as a solid mass of cells. Gastrulation in stereoblastulae differs from gastrulation in a coeloblastula, because there is no internal space for the cells to divide into. Instead, cells on the surface of the ball divide at a faster rate, until the surface of the ball is covered with a new layer of cells. This layer functions as the ectoderm, while the solid ball in the middle forms the endoderm, as in the previous form of stereogastrula. The archenteron will form later, from inside the solid mass of cells. Gastrulation of a Discoblastula A discoblastula, unlike the other forms of blastulae, does not form a ball of cells around the original cell. Rather, the cells are arranged in a disc at one end of the blastula, and each has access to a yolk reservoir at the other end. Gastrulation in a discoblastula involves the ends of the disc of cells curving, and growing back toward each other. The bottom layer develops as the endoderm, while the top layer further from the yolk develops as the endoderm. This is known as involution. Meaning of Gastrulation: The blastula passes into the stage called gastrula by the process—Gastrulation. This process is extremely important in the ontogenetic process of an animal, because the blue-print of the future organisation is laid down during this phase. During this crucial and dynamic process major presumptive organ-forming areas of the blastula become reorganized in a fashion that allows their ready transformation into the fundamental body plan of a species. Gastrulation is essentially a process of migration of cells from one place to the other in the embryo. Besides movement of cells, considerable nuclear differentiation also takes place. In almost all animals it results in: (i) The establishment and differentiation of three primary germinal layers—ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm, (ii) The establishment of nuclear differentiation and (iii) The beginning of the control of genetic factors over development. 2. Basic Mechanism in Gastrulation: The process of gastrulation involves following three cellular activities, cell-movement, cell- contact and cell-division. All these mechanisms are carried in a nicely co-ordinated and integrated way. Number of factors is believed to be responsible for this coordination, but it has not been possible to pin point the final answer. It is undeniable that this process is controlled largely by intrinsic factors which are correlated with the external as well as internal conditions. 3. Methods used to Study Gastrulation: The correct observation of incidences during gastrulation was started from the findings of W. Vogt in 1923. Vogt used vital dyes (Janus green and Neutral red) to mark the cells in an early gastrula and noted that cells during gastrulation actually migrate from one place to the other. The vital dye technique of Vogt resulted into the application of several other methods: (i) Visible differences in the cytoplasmic particles were used as natural marker, (ii) Tagging of the cells with carbon particles and (iii) Tagging of the cells with radioactive substances. 4. Morphogenetic Movement of Cells in Gastrulation: During gastrulation, cells from one region of embryo move to another to take up their future fateful position. Two terms, emboly and epiboly which are quite opposite in their meanings, are generally applied to explain the process of movement. Emboly means the throwing in or insertion of cells and epiboly signifies the extending upon. The movement of cells establishes a particular form and involved in organ formation in embryo—so this movement is designated as the morphogenetic movement. Fig. 5.15 shows the movement of cells in gastrulation. Fundamentally, the morphogenetic movement is similar but the details of the process vary greatly. Following types of cells movement occur: Epiboly: It involves the extension along the anteroposterior axis and peripheral divergence. Emboly: The inward movement of cells is classified into different types depending on the behaviour of migrating cells. These are: (i) Invagination: It denotes the infolding of a layer of cells to form a cavity encircled by infolded cells. Generally in the gastrulation of Amphioxus and frog, the wall of the blastoderm is pushed inside the blastocoel. This creates a new cavity called the archenteron which communicates with the exterior by a blastopore. This process of inpushing goes on and the inpushed layer forms the walls of the cavity. The archenteron (or primitive gut) completely obliterates the blastocoel. (ii) Involution: It implies the inward rotation of cells as seen in the gastrulation of amphibian and avian eggs. From one end near the edge of the blastoderm, the cells begin to move inwards to form the inner lining of the blastoderm. (iii) Convergence: It means the movement of cells to a particular region of the gastrula. In amphibian egg, the migration of cells to the external edge of the blastoporal lip is designated as convergence. The same phenomenon of convergence of cells is seen in the formation of primitive streak in chick embryo. (iv) Divergence: This phenomenon is opposite to convergence, when involuted cells diverge to take up their future positions inside the gastrula.
Recommended publications
  • Divergence of Ectodermal and Mesodermal Gene Regulatory Network Linkages in Early Development of Sea Urchins
    Divergence of ectodermal and mesodermal gene regulatory network linkages in early development of sea urchins Eric M. Erkenbracka,1,2 aDivision of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125 Edited by Neil H. Shubin, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, and approved October 5, 2016 (received for review August 3, 2016) Developmental gene regulatory networks (GRNs) are assemblages of to study in sea urchins, whose lineages have undergone multiple gene regulatory interactions that direct ontogeny of animal body changes in life history strategies (8). Importantly, an excellent fossil plans. Studies of GRNs operating in the early development of record affords dating of evolutionary events (9), which has established euechinoid sea urchins have revealed that little appreciable change has that the sister subclasses of sea urchins—cidaroids and euechinoids— occurred since their divergence ∼90 million years ago (mya). These diverged at least 268 million years ago (mya) (10). Differences in observations suggest that strong conservation of GRN architecture the timing of developmental events in embryogenesis of cida- was maintained in early development of the sea urchin lineage. Test- roids and euechinoids have long been a topic of interest, but ing whether this holds for all sea urchins necessitates comparative have become the subject of molecular research only recently analyses of echinoid taxa that diverged deeper in geological time. (11–18). Recent studies highlighted extensive divergence of skeletogenic me- Research on the early development of the euechinoid purple soderm specification in the sister clade of euechinoids, the cidaroids, sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (Sp) has brought into suggesting that comparative analyses of cidaroid GRN architecture high resolution the players and molecular logic directing devel- may confer a greater understanding of the evolutionary dynamics of opmental GRNs that specify Sp’s early embryonic domains developmental GRNs.
    [Show full text]
  • Animal Form & Function
    Animals Animal Form & Function By far, most diversity of bauplane (body forms). And most variations within bauplane. Animals are Animated “ANIMAL” ≠ MAMMAL — Fascinating Behaviors Animal Cells • Eukaryotic • No cell wall No plastids No central vacuole • Multicellular: – extensive specialization & differentiation – unique cell-cell junctions Heyer 1 Animals Animals Blastulation & Gastrulation • Motile • Early embryonic development in animals 3 In most animals, cleavage results in the formation of a multicellular stage called a 1 The zygote of an animal • Highly differentiated blastula. The blastula of many animals is a undergoes a succession of mitotic tissues cell divisions called cleavage. hollow ball of cells. Blastocoel • Intercellular junctions Cleavage Cleavage – tissue-specific cadherins 6 The endoderm of the archenteron develops into Eight-cell stage Blastula Cross section Zygote • Extracellular protein the the animal’s of blastula fibers digestive tract. Blastocoel Endoderm – collagen 5 The blind pouch formed by gastrulation, called Ectoderm • Diploid life cycle the archenteron, opens to the outside Gastrula Gastrulation via the blastopore. Blastopore 4 Most animals also undergo gastrulation, a • Blastula/gastrula rearrangement of the embryo in which one end of the embryo folds inward, expands, and eventually fills the embryo blastocoel, producing layers of embryonic tissues: the Figure 32.2 ectoderm (outer layer) and the endoderm (inner layer). Primary embryonic germ layers Primary embryonic germ layers • Diploblastic: two germ
    [Show full text]
  • T-Brain Regulates Archenteron Induction Signal 5207 Range of Amplification
    Development 129, 5205-5216 (2002) 5205 Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 2002 DEV5034 T-brain homologue (HpTb) is involved in the archenteron induction signals of micromere descendant cells in the sea urchin embryo Takuya Fuchikami1, Keiko Mitsunaga-Nakatsubo1, Shonan Amemiya2, Toshiya Hosomi1, Takashi Watanabe1, Daisuke Kurokawa1,*, Miho Kataoka1, Yoshito Harada3, Nori Satoh3, Shinichiro Kusunoki4, Kazuko Takata1, Taishin Shimotori1, Takashi Yamamoto1, Naoaki Sakamoto1, Hiraku Shimada1 and Koji Akasaka1,† 1Department of Mathematical and Life Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Hiroshima University, Higashi-Hiroshima 739-8526, Japan 2Department of Integrated Biosciences, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan 3Department of Zoology, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan 4LSL, Nerima-ku, Tokyo 178-0061, Japan *Present address: Evolutionary Regeneration Biology Group, RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Kobe 650-0047, Japan †Author for correspondence (e-mail: [email protected]) Accepted 30 July 2002 SUMMARY Signals from micromere descendants play a crucial role in cells, the initial specification of primary mesenchyme cells, sea urchin development. In this study, we demonstrate that or the specification of endoderm. HpTb expression is these micromere descendants express HpTb, a T-brain controlled by nuclear localization of β-catenin, suggesting homolog of Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus. HpTb is expressed that
    [Show full text]
  • Apoptosis in Amphibian Development
    Advances in Bioscience and Biotechnology, 2012, 3, 669-678 ABB http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/abb.2012.326087 Published Online October 2012 (http://www.SciRP.org/journal/abb/) Apoptosis in amphibian development Jean-Marie Exbrayat, Elara N. Moudilou, Lucie Abrouk, Claire Brun Université de Lyon, UMRS 449, Biologie Générale, Université Catholique de Lyon, Reproduction et Développement Comparé, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Lyon, France Email: [email protected] Received 13 August 2012; revised 20 September 2012; accepted 28 September 2012 ABSTRACT divide to give the first two blastomeres which continue to divide becoming a morula. An inner cavity, the blasto- Amphibians and more particularly X. laevis are mod- coel, appears in the mass cell of the embryo, becoming a els often used for studying apoptosis during embry- blastula. During this period of cleavage, the size and onic development. Using several methods, searchers shape of embryos do not vary. Before mid blastula tran- determined the localization of programmed cell sition (MBT), zygotic genes do not express excepted deaths (PCD). Several experimental methods also those encoding for proteins implicated in membrane have been used to understand the regulatory mecha- building. Maternal mRNAs previously accumulated in nisms of apoptosis, throughout development, contrib- the oocytes remain present in the cytoplasm of zygote uting to elucidate the general action of several genes and they are distributed into the cytoplasm of blas- and proteins. Apoptosis occurs very early, with a first tomeres during cleavage. These maternal mRNAs encode program under control of maternal genes expressed for proteins which will be implicated in expression of before MBT, in order to eliminate damaged cells be- zygotic genes.
    [Show full text]
  • Archenteron Precursor Cells Can Organize Secondary Axial Structures in the Sea Urchin Embryo
    Development 124, 3461-3470 (1997) 3461 Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 1997 DEV3652 Archenteron precursor cells can organize secondary axial structures in the sea urchin embryo Hélène Benink1, Gregory Wray2 and Jeff Hardin1,3,* 1Department of Zoology and 3Program in Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1117 West Johnson Street, Madison, WI 53706, USA 2Department of Ecology and Evolution, SUNY, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA *Author for correspondence: (e-mail: [email protected]) SUMMARY Local cell-cell signals play a crucial role in establishing terning sites within the ectoderm. The ectopic skeletal major tissue territories in early embryos. The sea urchin elements are bilaterally symmetric, and flank the ectopic embryo is a useful model system for studying these inter- archenteron, in some cases resulting in mirror-image, actions in deuterostomes. Previous studies showed that symmetric skeletal elements. Since the induced patterned ectopically implanted micromeres from the 16-cell embryo ectoderm and supernumerary skeletal elements are derived can induce ectopic guts and additional skeletal elements in from the host, the ectopic presumptive archenteron tissue sea urchin embryos. Using a chimeric embryo approach, we can act to ‘organize’ ectopic axial structures in the sea show that implanted archenteron precursors differentiate urchin embryo. autonomously to produce a correctly proportioned and patterned gut. In addition, the ectopically implanted pre- sumptive archenteron tissue induces ectopic skeletal pat- Key words: induction, gastrulation, sea urchin, endoderm INTRODUCTION mapping studies have shown that veg1 descendants contribute tissue to the vegetal regions of the archenteron by the late Progressive refinement of the embryonic body plan via local gastrula stage (Logan and McClay, 1997); by this time veg1 inductive interactions is a common theme among animal and veg2 descendants intermingle within the wall of the archen- embryos.
    [Show full text]
  • Regulative Capacity of the Archenteron During Gastrulation in the Sea Urchin
    Development 122, 607-616 (1996) 607 Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 1996 DEV3313 Regulative capacity of the archenteron during gastrulation in the sea urchin David R. McClay* and Catriona Y. Logan Developmental, Cellular and Molecular Biology Group, LSRC, Duke University, Durham NC 27708, USA *Author for correspondence (e-mail: [email protected]) SUMMARY Gastrulation in the sea urchin involves an extensive ognizable morphology of the archenteron was re-estab- rearrangement of cells of the archenteron giving rise to lished. Long after the archenteron reveals territorial speci- secondary mesenchyme at the archenteron tip followed by fication through expression of specific markers, the endo- the foregut, midgut and hindgut. To examine the regula- dermal cells remain capable of being respecified to other tive capacity of this structure, pieces of the archenteron gut regions. Thus, for much of gastrulation, the gut is con- were removed or transplanted at different stages of gas- ditionally specified. We propose that this regulative ability trulation. After removal of any or all parts of the archen- requires extensive and continuous short-range communi- teron, the remaining veg 1 and/or veg 2 tissue regulated to cation between cells of the archenteron in order to reor- replace the missing parts. Endoderm transplanted to ganize the tissues and position the boundaries of this ectopic positions also regulated to that new position in the structure even after experimental alterations. archenteron. This ability to replace or regulate endoderm did not decline until after full elongation of the archenteron was completed. When replacement occurred, the new gut Key words: morphogenesis, cell lineage, cell fate, differentiation, was smaller relative to the remaining embryo but the rec- specification.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 4 Sea Urchin Development Carolyn M
    Chapter 4 Sea Urchin Development Carolyn M. Conway Don Igelsrud Department of Biology Department of Biology Virginia Commonwealth University The University of Calgary Richmond, Virginia 23284 USA Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4 Canada Arthur F. Conway Department of Biology Randolph-Macon College Ashland, Virginia 23005 USA Carolyn M. Conway is currently an Assistant Professor of Biology at Virginia Com- monwealth University where she teaches Animal Embryology, Devetopmental Biology, and Teratology. She received her BS and MA degrees at Longwood College and the College of William and Mary respectively. She received her PhD from the University of Miami where her research involved an ultrastructural study of sea urchin eggs. While completing her doctorate she spent several Summers at the Marine Biological Labo- ratory as a participant in the Fertilization and Gamete Physiology Training Program. Prior to joining the VCU faculty she taught at Iowa State University and Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Her current research involves the relationship between ma- ternal autoimmune disease and birth defects. Don Igelsrud is currently an Instructor of Biology at The University of Calgary where he is in charge of the introductory zoology laboratories. He received his BS degree from the University of Kansas and his MA degree from Washington University. Prior to joining the faculty at The University of Calgary he taught at Delaware Valley College where he developed a sfrong interest in laboratory teaching, and at Northwestern Uni- versity where he was Biology Laboratory Director. His main interests are in increasing awareness and understanding of living phenomena and in finding living organisms that survive well in the laboratory with a minimum of maintenance.
    [Show full text]
  • Dynamics of Thin Filopodia During Sea Urchin Gastrulation
    Development 121, 2501-2511 (1995) 2501 Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 1995 Dynamics of thin filopodia during sea urchin gastrulation Jeffrey Miller1, Scott E. Fraser2 and David McClay1,* 1Developmental, Cell and Molecular Biology, Duke University, SRC, Box 91000, Durham, NC 27708, USA 2Division of Biology, Beckman Institute (139-74), California Institute of Technology, Pasadena CA 91125, USA *Author for correspondence: e-mail [email protected] SUMMARY At gastrulation in the sea urchin embryo, a dramatic involvement in cell-cell interactions associated with rearrangement of cells establishes the three germ layers of signaling and patterning at gastrulation. Nickel-treatment, the organism. Experiments have revealed a number of cell which is known to create a patterning defect in skeleto- interactions at this stage that transfer patterning informa- genesis due to alterations in the ectoderm, alters the normal tion from cell to cell. Of particular significance, primary position-dependent differences in the thin filopodia. The mesenchyme cells, which are responsible for production of effect is present in recombinant embryos in which the the embryonic skeleton, have been shown to obtain ectoderm alone was treated with nickel, and is absent in extensive positional information from the embryonic recombinant embryos in which only the primary mes- ectoderm. In the present study, high resolution Nomarski enchyme cells were treated, suggesting that the filopodial imaging reveals the presence of very thin filopodia (0.2-0.4 length is substratum dependent rather than being primary µm in diameter) extending from primary mesenchyme cells mesenchyme cell autonomous. The thin filopodia provide a as well as from ectodermal and secondary mesenchyme means by which cells can contact others several cell cells.
    [Show full text]
  • 2. Archenteron Morphogenesis in the Sea Urchin David R
    Cell-Cell Interactions in Early Development, pages 15-29 © 1991 Wiley-Liss, Inc. I .f 2. Archenteron Morphogenesis in the Sea Urchin David R. McClay, John Morrill, and Jeff Hardin Department of Zoology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27707 (D .R.M., J.H.); Department of Biology, New College, Sarasota, Florida 33580 (J .M.) INTRODUCTION The progression of development involves an impressive array of morphoge­ netic rearrangements, each of which involves the coordination of multiple cel­ lular functions and molecular events. We have been studying gastrulation in the sea urchin embryo as a relatively simple model system in an attempt to understand the sorts of rules observed by an embryo as it performs a single morphogenetic event. To the observer, gastrulation in this embryo involves two major cell movements. First, primary mesenchyme cells ingress and dis­ playa series of migratory behaviors leading to the assembly of the larval skel­ eton. Second, invagination of the archenteron leads to the formation of the primitive gut. The ingression and subsequent behavior of primary mesenchyme cells is examined elsewhere in this volume (Ettensohn, Chapter 11). Here we review events associated with formation of the archenteron . In echinoderm embryos, archenteron formation begins with an indentation of the vegetal plate, followed by elongation of the indented area until a tubular archenteron forms that extends into the blastocoel . Elongation continues until the tube reaches a defined, anatomically specific region on the wall of the blastocoel (Fig . I). All through invagination, secondary mesenchyme cells at the tip of the archenteron extend filopodia that make contact with the wall of the blastocoel.
    [Show full text]
  • Animal Development Bio 1413: General Zoology Laboratory Ziser, 2008 All Living Organisms Exhibit Some Form of Growth and Development
    Animal Development Bio 1413: General Zoology Laboratory Ziser, 2008 All living organisms exhibit some form of growth and development. Members of the animal kingdom have the most complex developmental cycle of any living organism. The sequence of discrete, recognizable stages that these organism pass through as they develop from the formation of a zygote (the fertilized egg) to the sexually mature adult are referred to as its developmental cycle.Animal development can be subdivided into several sequential processes: gametogenesis, fertilization, embryonic development and post embryonic development. Embryonic development includes the processes of growth, determination, differentiation and morphogenesis. 1. Gametes. The gametes are produced by the process of meiosis which differs from mitosis in that only one of each chromosome ends up in the cells after division. The male gamete, the sperm, is small and almost always flagellated. The female gamete us usually large since it contains yolk, and spherical. slides: sperm smear starfish unfertilized eggs Activity Be able to distinguish between sperm and eggs and to find the following structures on slides and illustrations: for sperm identify: head, middle piece, tail (flagellum) for egg identify: cell membrane, nucleus, nucleolus 2. Fertilization. At fertilization only a single sperm penetrates and adds its chromosomes to those in the egg. The fertilized egg then has a pair of each chromosomes, one each from the male parent and the other of each from the female parent. To prevent additional sperm from penetrating the egg a fertilization cone is produced to produce the original sperm into the egg quickly. Then a fertilization membrane expands around the egg and pushes away and “locks out” other sperm cells.
    [Show full text]
  • Amphibian Gastrulation: History and Evolution of a 125 Year-Old Concept
    Int. J. Dev. Biol. 45: 771-795 (2001) Essay Amphibian gastrulation: history and evolution of a 125 year-old concept JEAN-CLAUDE BEETSCHEN* Centre de Biologie du Développement, Université Paul-Sabatier, Toulouse, France CONTENTS I. Depicting the Amphibian gastrula: how it forms and how it changes The unnamed gastrula The gastrula concept (Haeckel, 1872) Gastrulation and formation of germ layers Blastopore formation and evolution Is there a primitive streak in Amphibians? First evidence for morphogenetic movements (Kopsch, 1895) Studies on gastrulation at the beginning of the 20th century Bottle cells: the case for cell movement Analysis of gastrulation and morphogenetic movements by means of vital staining: Vogt (1929) and his followers II. An overview of modern advances in gastrulation studies Xenopus gastrulation Urodele gastrulation Analysis of mesoderm cell migration and of gastrulation movements Bottle cells: origin and functions Are epibolic and inward movements independent of each other? Conclusions Summary The classical characteristics of a gastrula stage in Metazoan about the processes leading from a relatively simple blastula to the development were established by Haeckel (1874, 1875) and since formation of an advanced gastrula ? Its architecture is now much then have been constantly used by embryologists. Different kinds more complex, with three germ layers subdivided into several of gastrulae have been recognized in animal groups and invagina- domains that are distributed along anteroposterior and dorsoven- tion phenomena, leading
    [Show full text]
  • The Cleavage Stage Origin of Spemann's Organizer: Analysis Of
    Development 120, 1179-1189 (1994) 1179 Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 1994 The cleavage stage origin of Spemann’s Organizer: analysis of the movements of blastomere clones before and during gastrulation in Xenopus Daniel V. Bauer1, Sen Huang2 and Sally A. Moody2,* 1Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Virginia 2Department of Anatomy and Neuroscience Program, The George Washington University Medical Center, 2300 I Street, NW Washington, DC 20037, USA *Author for correspondence SUMMARY Recent investigations into the roles of early regulatory the ventral animal clones extend across the entire dorsal genes, especially those resulting from mesoderm induction animal cap. These changes in the blastomere constituents or first expressed in the gastrula, reveal a need to elucidate of the animal cap during epiboly may contribute to the the developmental history of the cells in which their tran- changing capacity of the cap to respond to inductive growth scripts are expressed. Although fates both of the early blas- factors. Pregastrulation movements of clones also result in tomeres and of regions of the gastrula have been mapped, the B1 clone occupying the vegetal marginal zone to the relationship between the two sets of fate maps is not become the primary progenitor of the dorsal lip of the clear and the clonal origin of the regions of the stage 10 blastopore (Spemann’s Organizer). This report provides embryo are not known. We mapped the positions of each the fundamental descriptions of clone locations during the blastomere clone during several late blastula and early important periods of axis formation, mesoderm induction gastrula stages to show where and when these clones move.
    [Show full text]