Cleavage of Frog and Chick Eggs
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Transcript Cleavage of Frog and Chick Eggs
Cleavage of Frog and Chick Eggs
Chapter VI
Total Development = cleavage,
morphogenesis, differentiation, growth
Cleavage-immediately after fertilization
Two kinds of divisions to convert egg to
mass of cells
– mitosis and cytokinesis
First cleavage in frog egg results in two
equal size cells
2nd cleavage division in frog is also
complete and equal
3rd division in frog is complete and
unequal. Cells are different sizes
After many divisions the animal pole has
more and smaller cells
Egg yolk has effect on cleavage divisions.
Slows them down
Blastocoel-internal cavity forms near the
animal pole after many cleavage divisions
Blastula--The developmental stage when
the blastocoel forms
Bird eggs--99% of egg is yolk, yolk
segregated from the cytoplasm
Most of the cytoplasm is in the cytoplasmic
cap on top of the yolk
Cleavage happens in the cytoplasmic cap
Don’t have cleavage in entire egg--
Incomplete
The cytoplasmic cap is called the
blastoderm
Under the blastoderm is a space called the
subgerminal space
Blastoderm is not a blastula because there is
no cavity
Cleavage in chicken egg produces a
blastoderm located at the animal pole
Incomplete cleavage occurs
Morphogenesis in Frog and
Chick Development
Chapter VII
Morphogenesis
Animals acquire form and structure during
this developmental stage
Movement of cells to specific locations is
characteristic of morphogenesis
Organism takes on a specific shape
Gastrulation--happens in morphogenesis
and results in three germinal layers.
Also results in the formation of gastrula
Three layers in gastrula are ectoderm,
mesoderm and endoderm
Frog Gastrulation
Begins with the blastula
First part of gastrulation is the formation of
a blastopore on surface of blastula
The cells begin to fold inward
Further folding of the blastopore results in a
cavity called the archenteron. The future gut
Blastopore becomes anus
The blastocoel is being displaced
Continued morphogenic movements result
in enlarging the archenteron, reducing the
blastocoel and forming a yolk plug over the
blastopore
In mature frog gastrula there are three germ
layers
Ectoderm which are the outer cells,
Endoderm which line the archenteron, and
mesoderm which is in between endo and
ecto
Mature gastrula is foundation for more
development to occur
Doesn’t stop morphogenesis
Others follow to form cell masses called
primary organ rudiments
Neurula-stage where the neural plate
develops and forms the neural tube which
will develop into the future nerve cord
Chick Gastrulation
Begins with the blastoderm
Forms a new cavity below the blastoderm
When cavity is formed its called the
blastocoel.
The subgerminal space is now called the
archenteron or future gut
Stage is not yet a gastrula because no germ
layers
Primitive groove forms on surface of
blastoderm due to cells moving into the
blastocoel
Related to the blastopore in frog
development
After cells move into the blastocoel there
are three distinct germ layers and can now
be called the gastrula
Continuation of morphogenesis results in
the neural plate and development of other
primary organ rudiments
In both the frog and chick the mature
gastrula provides the structural foundation
for forming more organs
Differentiation in Animal
Development
Chapter VIII
Differentiation--where cells take on specific
structures and functions
Experiment--Future eye region was
transplanted into different areas and a salt
water solution.
– The regions differentiated into different
structures when transplanted
– Salt water-did not differentiate
Potency-the ability of an embryonic part to
develop into different kinds of structures
Eye region of frog has many potencies
Future eye region of frog was
undifferentiated
Differentiation of eye depends on its
location based on experiment
Eye regions in neurula were placed at
different locations in a later embryo
All developed into an eye
Eye region of neurula has only one potency
In neurula stage the future eye region has
become differentiated and can only form an
eye
The primary organ rudiment in neurula is
more determined than in the gastrula
As the embryo ages the number of potencies
possible for an area becomes less
Morphogenesis continues along with the
processes of differentiation and growth
Factors Controlling Animal
Development
Chapter IX
Nuclear Factors
Experiments are presented that demonstrate
possible control mechanisms of the events
of animal development
Experiment with needle into frog eggs.
– With nucleus---no effect on embryo
– Without nucleus--abnormal or no embryo
Results indicate that nucleus controls
embryo development
All cells result from mitosis and cytokinesis
Cytoplasmic Factors
All cells should have the same set of genes
They will differentiate into different
structures
How can they develop differently if they
have the same set of instructions?
Look at sea urchin development
Experiment-pigment band develops into the
endoderm of gastrula
Egg cut in half through the animal and
vegetal. Results animal forms blastula with
ectoderm only and dies-Vegetal forms
incomplete embryo with all 3 germs layers
and dies
Results--endoderm and mesoderm
formation are contained in the vegetal
Exp. 2--Sea urchin cut in half through both
animal and vegetal axis-length wise
– Forms two small complete embryos
Results of both experiments--Germ
formation for three germ layers has
instructions in the cytoplasm
Frog egg experiments-p120
– Hair used to constrict fertilized egg into two
halves
– Halves connected by bridge of cytoplasm
– Gray crescent area of cytoplasm equally
divided
– Half with nucleus divides first. Both halves
form normal embryos
2nd frog experiment. Hair again only constricts
with part of grey crescent on one half with nucleus
The side with only part of the grey crescent didn’t
develop properly while the half with the gray
crescent did
These experiments indicate that the control of
nucleus is regulated by the cytoplasmic
environment
Extracellular Factors
Experiments so far show what happens with
unequal distribution of materials within the
egg
Are there other factors at play in the
development of the embryo?
In the experiment given on p123 tissue was
transplanted into the blastocoel of a gastrula
stage embryo
From this transplanted tissue a 2nd head formed
where belly tissue should have formed
This means that transplanted tissue affects the
normal development of tissue
Exp. On p125 ectoderm placed in culture = no
differentiation on tissues
– Ectoderm and mesoderm in culture = differentiation of
ectoderm but not mesoderm
– Why? Mesoderm stimulated differentiation in ectoderm
Induction—name given to process where
one tissue induces the differentiation of
another
This induction can explain how the
differentiation of different cells occur at
different times.
– As new tissue is formed it induces other tissues
to form
Other experiments indicate that induction is not
the only influence on development
When a frog gastrula was placed in culture with
pieces of adult heart-no normal heart produced in
embryo
Differentiated adult heart produce certain
chemicals into culture that inhibited the
development of heart tissue in embryo
Inhibition—differentiated cells produce substances
that inhibit cells from developing in the same way.
Don’t get two hearts this way
Interactions occurring between groups of tissues
also help development of certain structures
– Exp. Limb bud of chick forms when ectoderm and
mesoderm work together.
– When they are grafted separately they don’t form the
limb properly
Also has to be limb bud ectoderm and mesoderm.
Can’t be any ectoderm and mesoderm
Also wing and leg bud experiments performed
The mesoderm taken from wing or leg will
develop into wing or leg if combined with
ectoderm from the other limb
Mesoderm controls development of limb
but may be affected by kind of ectoderm it
is in contact with
Differential gene Action—not all genes are
turned on at the same time in the cells
nucleus
Cells differentiate at different rates and in
different directions depending on which
genes are turned on when
The Operon Theory of Gene Control
Chapter X
How are the genes controlled so that some
are on and some are off?
Operon Theory—developed with research
on bacteria
Enzyme-controls rate of chemical reaction
Structural genes-control enzymes
Operon is operator gene and structural
genes
Operator gene controls the structural genes
Regulatory gene also present to make repressor
which deactivates the operator gene and turns of
enzyme function of structural genes
When enzymes are produced, if high enough
concentrations are reached some of them combine
with the repressor to trigger the shut off of the
operator gene
When substrate is high enough it
deactivates the repressor and allows the
operator gene to turn on the structural genes
to function and make enzymes
Regulatory gene has indirect effect on the
operator gene