Chapter 21 - gloriousbiology
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Transcript Chapter 21 - gloriousbiology
Chapter 21
The Genetic Basis of Development
How do we study
development?
Developmentally biology used to simply be
observational studies to describe the sequence
of events in development (i.e. what is occurring
in development)
Using concepts from molecular genetics,
scientists can now answer questions about the
mechanisms of development (i.e. how
development is occurring)
Model Organism
The organism that is used to study a particular
question that is representative of a larger group
(the group in question)
Criteria to be an effective model:
Easy to grow in lab
Short generation times
Develop outside of mother’s body
Small genome
Well understood genome
Examples of Model Organisms
Organism
Easy Short
to
Gen.
grow? time?
Develops
outside of
Mother’s
body?
Small
genome
?
Well understood
genome?
Yes!
2
weeks
Yes
180Mb
Yes, sequenced
Yes!
3.5
days
Yes
97Mb
Fairly well
understood
Yes!
9
weeks
No
2600Mb
Yes, can make
knock out
genes for
almost any trait
Yes!
2-4
Yes
1700Mb
In the process
of being
mapped and
sequenced
Yes
118Mb
Fairly well
understood
months
*
Yes!
8-10
weeks
Embryonic Development
Involves three types of processes
Cell division
Cell differentiation
Morphogenesis
All of these processes can be happening at the
same time, but it all must begin with cell
division.
Cell Division
Successions (series) of mitotic divisions
Zygote (sperm + egg) gives rise to a
large number of cells
Cell Differentiation
Cells become
specialized in
structure and
function
Morphogenesis
(morph-form) (genesis-creation)
The physical processes that give an
organism its shape
Normal
Abnormal
Animals vs. Plants
In animals, but not plants, morphogenesis relies on movement of cells
Animals vs. Plants
In plants, but not animals, morphogenesis and growth occur throughout life.
Due to the presence of apical meristems (perpetually embryonic regions)
Genomic Equivalence
Almost all cells in an organism have the
same genes
If all of the cells have the same genes,
why do we have different cell types?
Differential gene expression in cells with the
same DNA allows for the differentiation of
these cells.
Genomic Equivalence:
Evidence
Totipotency in plants
Toti- total, potent-power
Differentiated cells from an
adult plant placed in a
culture medium grow into an
adult plant.
Cloning- using one or more
somatic cells from a
multicellular organism to
make another genetically
identical individual
Genomic Equivalence:
Evidence
Different approach used
for animals Nuclear
transplantation
Nucleus from a
differentiated cell placed
in an enucleated* egg
cell
Age of differentiated cell
seems to reduce the
percentage of success
Reproductive Cloning
Goal: to produce new
individuals
Specialized cell (e.g.
mammary cell) starved
of nutrients cell
dedifferentiates fused
with an enucleated egg
cell grown in culture
implanted in uterus
Let's watch
Problems:
Small percentage of embryos develop
normally until birth
Prone to difficulties that are generally
associated with aging
Why? Donor nuclei are not always
completely reprogrammed
Some still contain gene regulation mechanisms
such as methylation of the DNA which prevent
some genes from being full expressed when they
should
Therapeutic cloning
Goal: to produce embryonic
stem cells to treat disease
Stem cell:
Unspecialized cell
Can reproduce itself
indefinitely
Can differentiate into
specialized cells
Stem Cells
Embryonic stem cells
Totipotent
Isolated from developing
embryos at the blastula
stage
Adult stem cells
Pluripotent
Replace non-reproducing
specialized cells
Why is this all possible?
Transcriptional regulation of gene
expression
Cell generates transcription factors that turn
on certain genes
Results in cell determination
The expression of genes for tissue specific
proteins
Tissue-specific proteins are only found in a particular
type of cell (and therefore, tissue) that give it the
characteristic structures/functions
Why is this all possible?
What determines which cells
will express certain genes?
Cytoplasmic determinants
Maternal substances that
influence development
Metotic division distribute the
heterogeneous cytoplasm
among the cells
Exposure of these cells to
different determinants
regulates expression of the
cell’s genes
What determines which cells
will express certain genes?
Induction
Signaling from embryonic
cells that cause a change
in nearby target cells.
More important as
number of embryonic
cells increases
Pattern Formation results
from similar genetic and
cellular mechanisms
Pattern Formation
Development of spatial organization
In animals, this occurs mainly in embryos
and juveniles *
In plants, this occurs continually at the apical
meristems
Determined by positional information
(cytoplasmic determinants and inductive
signals)
Pattern Formation
This can be difficult to study
In order to study, researchers cause and
observe mutations. When a single mutation
occurs and a change is see, it can be
deduced that the mutation has caused the
change
However, some mutations (especially those
in genes as important as pattern formation
genes) can be embryonic lethals
Pattern Formation
1) Axis Development
Result of cytoplasmic determinants
cd’s are proteins encoded by maternal effect genes (also
called egg-polarity genes)
Sets up the left/right axis and the ventral/dorsal axis
2) Segmentation pattern
Gradients of proteins in the different regions of the
body direct the expression of segmentation genes
Pattern Formation
3. Identity of Body Parts
Determined by homeotic genes
The role of Cell-Signaling
Induction
Sequential events that drive organ formation
Produce effects via signal transduction pathways
Response of the induced cell is generally activation
of transcription for genes that will characterize
(specialize) the cell
Apoptosis
Programmed cell death
1 mm
Figure 21.19
Plant Development
Cell lineage is less important because
many cells are totipotent
Most regulation is done with cell signaling
or transcriptional regulation
Organ identity genes determine which
organ will grow from the apical meristem
at any given time
Similar to homeotic genes of animals.
Homeotic Genes
All contain a 180 nucleotide sequence called
homeobox
This homeobox specifies (codes for) a 60 amino
acid homeodomain
Homeotic genes are highly conserved across
the animal kingdom.
Has led to the formation of a new field: Evo-devo
While plants often have homeobox sequences,
they do not often play a major role in pattern
formation.
Rats.
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