Animal Development
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Transcript Animal Development
Principles of
Development
Chapter 8
Key Events in Development
Development describes
the changes in an organism
from its earliest beginnings
through maturity.
Search for commonalities.
Key Events in Development
Specialization of cell types occurs as a
hierarchy of developmental decisions.
Cell types arise from conditions created in preceding
stages.
Interactions become increasingly restrictive.
With each new stage:
Each stage limits developmental fate.
Cells lose option to become something different
Said to be determined.
Key Events in Development
The two basic processes responsible for this
progressive subdivision:
Cytoplasmic localization
Induction
Fertilization
Fertilization is the initial event in development
in sexual reproduction.
Union of male and female gametes
Provides for recombination of paternal and
maternal genes.
Restores the diploid number.
Activates the egg to begin development.
Fertilization
Oocyte Maturation
Egg grows in size by accumulating yolk.
Contains much mRNA, ribosomes, tRNA and
elements for protein synthesis.
Morphogenetic determinants direct the activation
and repression of specific genes later in postfertilization development.
Egg nucleus grows in size, bloated with RNA.
Now called the germinal vesicle.
Fertilization
Most of these preparations in the egg occur
during the prolonged prophase I.
In mammals
Oocyte now has a highly structured system.
After fertilization it will support nutritional
requirements of the embryo and direct its
development through cleavage.
After meiosis resumes, the egg is ready to fuse
its nucleus with the sperm nucleus.
Fertilization
A century of
research has been
conducted on
marine
invertebrates.
Especially sea
urchins
Contact Between Sperm &
Egg
Broadcast spawners often
release a chemotactic
factor that attracts sperm
to eggs.
Species specific
Sperm enter the jelly
layer.
Egg-recognition proteins
on the acrosomal process
bind to species-specific
sperm receptors on the
vitelline envelope.
Fertilization in Sea Urchins
Prevention of
polyspermy – only one
sperm can enter.
Fast block
Depolarization of
membrane
Slow block
Cortical reaction
resulting in fertilization
membrane
Fertilization in Sea Urchins
The cortical reaction follows the fusion of
thousands of enzyme-rich cortical granules with
the egg membrane.
Cortical granules release contents between the
membrane and vitelline envelope.
Creates an osmotic gradient
Water rushes into space
Elevates the envelope
Lifts away all bound sperm except the one sperm
that has successfully fused with the egg plasma
membrane.
Fertilization in Sea Urchins
Fertilization in Sea Urchins
One cortical granule
enzyme causes the
vitelline envelope to
harden.
Now called the
fertilization
membrane.
Block to polyspermy is
now complete.
Similar process occurs
in mammals.
Fertilization in Sea Urchins
The increased Ca2+
concentration in the
egg after the cortical
reaction results in an
increase in the rates
of cellular respiration
and protein
synthesis.
The egg is
activated.
Fusion of Pronuclei
After sperm and egg membranes fuse, the sperm loses
its flagellum.
Fusion of male and female pronuclei forms a diploid
zygote nucleus.
Cleavage
Cleavage – rapid
cell divisions
following fertilization.
Very little growth
occurs.
Each cell called a
blastomere.
Morula – solid ball
of cells. First 5-7
divisions.
Polarity
The eggs and zygotes of many animals (not mammals)
have a definite polarity.
The polarity is defined by the distribution of yolk.
The vegetal pole has the most yolk and the animal
pole has the least.
Body Axes
The development of body axes
in frogs is influenced by the
polarity of the egg.
The polarity of the egg determines
the anterior-posterior axis before
fertilization.
At fertilization, the pigmented cortex slides
over the underlying cytoplasm toward the
point of sperm entry. This rotation (red
arrow) exposes a region of lighter-colored
cytoplasm, the gray crescent, which is a
marker of the dorsal side.
The first cleavage division bisects the
gray crescent. Once the anteriorposterior and dorsal-ventral axes are
defined, so is the left-right axis.
Amount of Yolk
Different types of animals
have different amounts of
yolk in their eggs.
Isolecithal – very little
yolk, even distribution.
Mesolecithal – moderate
amount of yolk
concentrated at vegetal
pole.
Telolecithal – Lots of yolk
at vegetal pole.
Centrolecithal – lots of
yolk, centrally located.
Cleavage in Frogs
Cleavage planes usually
follow a specific pattern
that is relative to the
animal and vegetal poles
of the zygote.
Animal pole blastomeres
are smaller.
Blastocoel in animal
hemisphere.
Little yolk, cleavage
furrows complete.
Holoblastic cleavage
Cleavage in Birds
Meroblastic
cleavage,
incomplete division
of the egg.
Occurs in species
with yolk-rich eggs,
such as reptiles and
birds.
Blastoderm – cap
of cells on top of
yolk.
Direct vs. Indirect
Development
When lots of nourishing yolk is present, embryos
develop into a miniature adult.
Direct development
When little yolk is present, young develop into larval
stages that can feed.
Indirect development
Mammals have little yolk, but nourish the embryo via
the placenta.
Blastula
A fluid filled cavity, the blastocoel, forms within
the embryo – a hollow ball of cells now called a
blastula.
Gastrulation
The morphogenetic
process called
gastrulation
rearranges the cells of
a blastula into a threelayered (triploblastic)
embryo, called a
gastrula, that has a
primitive gut.
Diploblastic
organisms have two
germ layers.
Gastrulation
The three tissue layers produced by gastrulation
are called embryonic germ layers.
The ectoderm forms the outer layer of the gastrula.
Outer surfaces, neural tissue
The endoderm lines the embryonic digestive tract.
The mesoderm partly fills the space between the
endoderm and ectoderm.
Muscles, reproductive system
Gastrulation – Sea Urchin
Gastrulation in a sea urchin produces an
embryo with a primitive gut (archenteron) and
three germ layers.
Blastopore – open end of gut, becomes anus
in deuterostomes.
Gastrulation - Frog
Result – embryo with gut & 3 germ layers.
More complicated:
Yolk laden cells in vegetal hemisphere.
Blastula wall more than one cell thick.
Gastrulation - Chick
Gastrulation in the chick is affected by the large
amounts of yolk in the egg.
Primitive streak – a groove on the surface along
the future anterior-posterior axis.
Functionally equivalent to blastopore lip in frog.
Gastrulation - Chick
Blastoderm consists of
two layers:
Epiblast and
hypoblast
Layers separated
by a blastocoel
Epiblast forms
endoderm and
mesoderm.
Cells on surface of
embryo form ectoderm.
Gastrulation - Mouse
In mammals the blastula is called a
blastocyst.
Inner cell mass will become the embryo while
trophoblast becomes part of the placenta.
Notice that the gastrula is similar to that of the
chick.
Suites of Developmental Characters
Two major groups of triploblastic animals:
Protostomes
Deuterostomes
Differentiated by:
Spiral vs. radial cleavage
Regulative vs. mosaic cleavage
Blastopore becomes mouth vs. anus
Schizocoelous vs. enterocoelous coelom formation.
Deuterostome Development
Deuterostomes include echinoderms (sea
urchins, sea stars etc) and chordates.
Radial cleavage
Deuterostome Development
Regulative development – the fate of a cell
depends on its interactions with neighbors, not
what piece of cytoplasm it has. A blastomere
isolated early in cleavage is able to from a
whole individual.
Deuterostome Development
Deuterostome means second mouth.
The blastopore becomes the anus and the
mouth develops as the second opening.
Deuterostome Development
The coelom is a body cavity completely
surrounded by mesoderm.
Mesoderm & coelom form simultaneously.
In enterocoely, the coelom forms as
outpocketing of the gut.
Deuterostome Development
Typical deuterostomes have coeloms that
develop by enterocoely.
Vertebrates use a modified version of
schizocoely.
Protostome Development
Protostomes include flatworms, annelids and
molluscs.
Spiral cleavage
Protostome Development
Mosaic
development – cell
fate is determined by
the components of
the cytoplasm found
in each blastomere.
Morphogenetic
determinants.
An isolated
blastomere can’t
develop.
Protostome Development
Protostome means first mouth.
Blastopore becomes the mouth.
The second opening will become the anus.
Protostome Development
In protostomes, a mesodermal band of tissue forms
before the coelom is formed.
The mesoderm splits to form a coelom.
Schizocoely
Not all protostomes have a true coelom.
Pseudocoelomates have a body cavity between
mesoderm and endoderm.
Acoelomates have no body cavity at all other than the
gut.
Two Clades of Protostomes
Lophotrochozoan protostomes include annelid
worms, molluscs, & some small phyla.
Lophophore – horseshoe shaped feeding structure.
Trochophore larva
Feature all four protostome characteristics.
Two Clades of Protostomes
The ecdysozoan protostomes include
arthropods, roundworms, and other taxa that
molt their exoskeletons.
Ecdysis – shedding of the cuticle.
Many do not show spiral cleavage.
Building a Body Plan
An organism’s development is determined by
the genome of the zygote and also by
differences that arise between early
embryonic cells.
Different genes will be expressed in different
cells.
Building a Body Plan
Uneven distribution of
substances in the egg
called cytoplasmic
determinants results in
some of these
differences.
Position of cells in the
early embryo result in
differences as well.
Induction
Restriction of Cellular Potency
In many species that have cytoplasmic
determinants only the zygote is totipotent,
capable of developing into all the cell types
found in the adult.
Restriction of Cellular Potency
Unevenly distributed cytoplasmic determinants
in the egg cell:
Are important in establishing the body axes.
Set up differences in blastomeres resulting from
cleavage.
Restriction of Cellular Potency
As embryonic development proceeds, the
potency of cells becomes progressively more
limited in all species.
Cell Fate Determination and Pattern
Formation by Inductive Signals
Once embryonic cell division creates cells that
differ from each other,
The cells begin to influence each other’s
fates by induction.
Induction
Induction is the
capacity of some
cells to cause other
cells to develop in a
certain way.
Dorsal lip of the
blastopore induces
neural development.
Primary organizer
Spemann-Mangold
Experiment
Transplanting a
piece of dorsal
blastopore lip from a
salamander gastrula
to a ventral or lateral
position in another
gastrula developed
into a notochord &
somites and it
induced the host
ectoderm to form a
neural tube.
Building a Body Plan
Cell differentiation – the specialization of cells
in their structure and function.
Morphogenesis – the process by which an
animal takes shape and differentiated cells end
up in their appropriate locations.
Building a Body Plan
The sequence includes
Cell movement
Changes in adhesion
Cell proliferation
There is no “hard-wired” master control panel
directing development.
Sequence of local patterns in which one step in
development is a subunit of another.
Each step in the developmental hierarchy is a
necessary preliminary for the next.
Hox Genes
Hox genes control the
subdivision of embryos
into regions of different
developmental fates
along the
anteroposterior axis.
Homologous in diverse
organisms.
These are master genes
that control expression
of subordinate genes.
Formation of the Vertebrate
Limb
Inductive signals play a major role in pattern
formation – the development of an animal’s
spatial organization.
Formation of the Vertebrate
Limb
The molecular cues that control pattern
formation, called positional information:
Tell a cell where it is with respect to the animal’s
body axes.
Determine how the cell and its descendents respond
to future molecular signals.
Formation of the Vertebrate
Limb
The wings and legs of chicks, like all vertebrate
limbs begin as bumps of tissue called limb
buds.
The embryonic cells within a limb bud respond
to positional information indicating location
along three axes.
Formation of the Vertebrate
Limb
One limb-bud organizer region is the apical
ectodermal ridge (AER).
A thickened area of ectoderm at the tip of the bud.
The second major limb-bud organizer region is
the zone of polarizing activity (ZPA).
A block of mesodermal tissue located underneath the
ectoderm where the posterior side of the bud is
attached to the body.
Morphogenesis
Morphogenesis is a major aspect of
development in both plants and animals but
only in animals does it involve the movement of
cells.
The Cytoskeleton, Cell Motility, and
Convergent Extension
Changes in the shape of a cell usually involve
reorganization of the cytoskeleton.
Changes in Cell Shape
The formation of the
neural tube is
affected by
microtubules and
microfilaments.
Cell Migration
The cytoskeleton also drives cell migration, or
cell crawling.
The active movement of cells from one place to
another.
In gastrulation, tissue invagination is caused by
changes in both cell shape and cell migration.
Evo-Devo
Evolutionary developmental biology evolution is a process in which organisms
become different as a result of changes in the
genetic control of development.
Genes that control development are similar in
diverse groups of animals.
Hox genes
Evo-Devo
Instead of evolution proceeding by the gradual
accumulation of numerous small mutations,
could it proceed by relatively few mutations in a
few developmental genes?
The induction of legs or eyes by a mutation in one
gene suggests that these and other organs can
develop as modules.
The Common Vertebrate Heritage
Vertebrates share a
common ancestry
and a common
pattern of early
development.
Vertebrate
hallmarks all
present briefly.
Dorsal neural tube
Notochord
Pharyngeal gill
pouches
Postanal tail
Amniotes
The embryos of birds, reptiles, and mammals
develop within a fluid-filled sac that is contained
within a shell or the uterus.
Organisms with these adaptations form a
monophyletic group called amniotes.
Allows for embryo to develop away from water.
Amniotes
In these three types of organisms, the three
germ layers also give rise to the four
extraembryonic membranes that surround
the developing embryo.
Amniotes
Amnion – fluid filled
membranous sac
that encloses the
embryo. Protects
embryo from shock.
Yolk sac – stores
yolk and pre-dates
the amniotes by
millions of years.
Amniotes
Allantois - storage of metabolic wastes during
development.
Chorion - lies beneath the eggshell and
encloses the embryo and other extraembryonic
membrane.
As embryo grows, the need for oxygen increases.
Allantois and chorion fuse to form a respiratory
surface, the chorioallantoic membrane.
Evolution of the shelled amniotic egg made
internal fertilization a requirement.
The Mammalian Placenta and Early
Mammalian Development
Most mammalian embryos do not develop
within an egg shell.
Develop within the mother’s body.
Most retained in the mother’s body.
Monotremes
Primitive mammals that lay eggs.
Large yolky eggs resembling bird eggs.
Duck-billed platypus and spiny anteater.
The Mammalian Placenta and Early
Mammalian Development
Marsupials
Embryos born at an early stage of development and
continue development in abdominal pouch of mother.
Placental Mammals
Represent 94% of the class Mammalia.
Evolution of the placenta required:
Reconstruction of extraembryonic membranes.
Modification of oviduct - expanded region formed a
uterus.
Mammalian Development
The eggs of placental mammals:
Are small and store few nutrients.
Exhibit holoblastic cleavage.
Show no obvious polarity.
Mammalian Development
Gastrulation and organogenesis resemble the
processes in birds and other reptiles.
Mammalian Development
Early embryonic development
in a human proceeds through
four stages:
Blastocyst reaches uterus.
Blastocyst implants.
Extraembryonic membranes
start to form and gastrulation
begins.
Gastrulation has produced a
3-layered embryo.
Mammalian Development
The extraembryonic membranes in mammals are
homologous to those of birds and other reptiles
and have similar functions.
Mammalian Development
Amnion
Surrounds embryo
Secretes fluid in
which embryo floats
Yolk sac
Contains no yolk
Source of stem cells
that give rise to blood
and lymphoid cells
Stem cells migrate to
into the developing
embryo
Allantois
Not needed to store
wastes
Contributes to the
formation of the
umbilical cord
Chorion
Forms most of the
placenta
Organogenesis
Various regions of the three embryonic germ
layers develop into the rudiments of organs
during the process of organogenesis.
Organogenesis
Many different
structures are
derived from
the three
embryonic
germ layers
during
organogenesis.
Derivatives of Ectoderm: Nervous
System and Nerve Growth
Just above the notochord
(mesoderm), the ectoderm
thickens to form a neural
plate.
Edges of the neural plate
fold up to create an
elongated, hollow neural
tube.
Anterior end of neural
tube enlarges to form the
brain and cranial nerves.
Posterior end forms the
spinal cord and spinal
motor nerves.
Derivatives of Ectoderm: Nervous
System and Nerve Growth
Neural crest cells pinch off from the neural
tube.
Give rise to
Portions of cranial nerves
Pigment cells
Cartilage
Bone
Ganglia of the autonomic system
Medulla of the adrenal gland
Parts of other endocrine glands
Neural crest cells are unique to vertebrates.
Important in evolution of the vertebrate head and
jaws.
Derivatives of Endoderm: Digestive
Tube and Survival of Gill Arches
During gastrulation, the
archenteron forms as the
primitive gut.
This endodermal cavity
eventually produces:
Digestive tract
Lining of pharynx and
lungs
Most of the liver and
pancreas
Thyroid, parathyroid
glands and thymus
Derivatives of Endoderm: Digestive
Tube and Survival of Gill Arches
Pharyngeal pouches are derivatives of the
digestive tract.
Arise in early embryonic development of all
vertebrates.
During development, endodermally-lined pharyngeal
pouches interact with overlying ectoderm to form gill
arches.
In fish, gill arches develop into gills.
In terrestrial vertebrates:
No respiratory function
1st arch and endoderm-lined pouch form upper
and lower jaws, and inner ear.
2nd, 3rd, and 4th gill pouches form tonsils,
parathyroid gland and thymus.
Derivatives of Mesoderm: Support,
Movement and the Beating Heart
Most muscles arise
from mesoderm
along each side of
the neural tube.
The mesoderm
divides into a linear
series of somites (38
in humans).
Derivatives of Mesoderm: Support,
Movement and the Beating Heart
The splitting, fusion and
migration of somites produce
the:
Axial skeleton
Dermis of dorsal skin
Muscles of the back, body wall, and
limbs
Heart
Lateral to the somites the
mesoderm splits to form the
coelom.