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Early Development

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Sperm and egg contribute an equal number of chromosomes to the offspring ... Fusing of a haploid sperm cell with a haploid egg cell to form a diploid zygote ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Development


1
Early Development
  • Chapter 21

2
Early Development
  • Highly variable among different organisms
  • Common genetic and cellular mechanisms in
    development
  • Begins with gametogenesis
  • Proceeds in ordered phases

3
Phases of Human Development
4
Gametogenesis and Fertilization
5
Gametogenesis
  • Formation of gametes, sperm and egg
  • In the reproductive organs of adult organisms
  • Sperm and egg contribute an equal number of
    chromosomes to the offspring
  • Egg is 100x larger, contributes more cytoplasm

6
Sperm Structure and Function
  • Animal sperm has four major compartments
  • the head (the acrosome)
  • the neck (a centriole)
  • a midpiece packed with mitochondria
  • a tail (a flagellum)

7
Sperm Structure and Function
  • In plants, sperm develop from pollen grains
  • Pollen are several haploid cells from meiosis
  • Pollen cell comes into contact with the stigma
    and divides by mitosis to produce two sperm
    nuclei
  • Move down the pollen tube to the egg cell

8
Sperm Structure and Function
9
Egg Structure and Function
  • Large, contain the nutrients required for the
    embryos early development
  • In species that lay eggs in the environment,
    stores in the egg are the only source of
    nutrients until it hatches
  • In mammals need stores until the egg implants in
    the placenta
  • Plants also provide endosperm to nourish the
    embryo

10
Egg Structure and Function
  • Cortical granules- vesicles filled with enzymes
    that assist fertilization in egg-laying animals
  • Vitelline envelope- fibrous, matlike sheet of
    glycoproteins that surrounds the egg
  • Jelly layer (a large, gelatinous mass that also
    encloses the egg

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Fertilization
  • Fusing of a haploid sperm cell with a haploid egg
    cell to form a diploid zygote
  • Can be internal or external
  • Requires exact timing and recognition
  • Must start development
  • Starts with gamete release

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14
Fertilization
  • Enzymes from the acrosome digest through the
    egg's jelly layer
  • Acrosomal process contacts the vitelline envelope
  • Plasma membranes fuse
  • Sperm nucleus, mitochondria, and centriole enter
    the egg
  • Sperm and egg nucleus fuse

15
Species Recognition
  • Fertilizin is a compound on the surface of sea
    urchin egg cells
  • Binds to bindin, a protein on the head of sea
    urchin sperm
  • Binding occurs in a species-specific manner
  • Fertilizin from the eggs of one species binds to
    sperm of its own species but does not bind to
    sperm of different species

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17
Blocking Polyspermy
  • Wide variety of mechanisms to block polyspermy
  • In sea urchins, fertilization results in erection
    of a physical barrier
  • Generates a fertilization envelope as cortical
    granules fuse with the plasma membrane

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19
Fertilization in Mammals
  • Internal fertilization, so species recognition is
    generally not an issue
  • Acrosome still breaks down zona pellucida
  • Egg cells have a binding site for sperm
  • Glycoprotein ZP3 in the zonabinds to the head of
    sperm
  • Enzymes released from cortical granules modify
    ZP3 to prevent binding by additional sperm

20
Fertilization in Flowering Plants
  • Takes place inside ovule
  • Double fertilization-one sperm nucleus fuses with
    an egg to form a zygote, and the other sperm
    nucleus fuses with two polar nuclei to form the
    triploid endosperm
  • Interaction between the pollen grains and the
    ovule involve species recognition
  • May also prevent self-fertilization

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22
Endosperm
  • Endosperm provides nutrients for the embryotic
    development, germination and early seedling growth

23
Animal Cleavage and Gastrulation
24
Cleavage
  • Cleavage is the set of rapid cell divisions
    (without growth) that follows fertilization
  • Divides up the cytoplasm into cells, no growth
  • Cells are called blastomeres
  • Forms a blastula, sphere of cells
  • Pattern of cleavage varies among species
  • Sometimes makes cells around yolk

25
Cleavage
26
Cleavage
  • Cells can divide at right angles to one another,
    forming tiers in a pattern called radial cleavage

27
Cleavage
  • Divide at oblique angles so that they pile up in
    a pattern called spiral cleavage

28
What Determines Cleavage and Development?
  • Cytoplasmic determinant is a molecule found in
    the egg that helps direct early development
  • Affect development independently of sperm or
    zygote genotype
  • Involved in differentiationthe generation of
    different cell types from a single cell

29
Activating the Zygotic Genome
  • Zygotic Genome not active during cleavage
  • In most animals it is not transcribed until after
    cleavage is well under way
  • Mammals are the exception
  • Transcribe from the zygotic genome at the
    two-cell stage

30
Embryonic Tissues
  • Animal embryos develop three types of tissues,
    called germ layers
  • Ectoderm forms the outer covering and nervous
    system
  • Mesoderm gives rise to muscle, internal organs,
    and connective tissues such as blood and
    cartilage
  • Endoderm produces the lining of the digestive
    tract or gut, along with some of the associated
    organs

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32
Gastrulation
  • After cleavage is complete a bastula is the
    result
  • Hollow ball of cells
  • Gastrulation rearranges cells
  • Results in the gastrula that contains the three
    embryonic tissue types
  • Each gives rise to different tissue types

33
Gastrulation
34
Gastrulation
  • At the end of gastrulation, the three embryonic
    tissues are arranged in layers, the gut has
    formed, and the major body axes have become
    visible

35
Plant Development
36
Plant Life Cycle
37
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38
Embryogenesis
  • First division is asymmetric
  • The large basal cell generates the suspensor
    structure
  • Apical cell will give rise to the shoot apical
    meristem and the root apical meristem
  • Meristem is area of rapidly dividing cells

39
Embryogenesis
  • An embryo contains an
  • Epidermis- an outer covering of cells that
    protect the individual.
  • Ground tissue- a mass of tissue that may later
    differentiate into cells for specialized
    functions
  • Vascular tissue- that will differentiate into
    specialized cells that transport food and water
    between root and shoot.

40
Invertebrate Development
41
Embryogenesis in Fruit Fly
  • Fertilized egg undergoes mitoses without
    cytokinesis
  • Produces a multinucleate cell with a cytoplasm
    filled with nutrient-rich yolk
  • Each nucleus migrates to the outside of the
    embryo cell and receives a plasma membrane
  • Embryo becomes an outer sheet of cells
    surrounding the original cytoplasm

42
Embryogenesis in Fruit Fly
43
Embryogenesis in Fruit Fly
  • Gastrulation starts with the formation of a cleft
    or furrow, followed by formation of furrows that
    define the head region and the series of body
    regions called segments
  • Embryo hatches to from larva
  • Larva forms pupa after a few days
  • Pupa goes through metamorphosis to become fly

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45
Vertebrate Development
46
Embryogenesis in Frog
  • Frog embryo goes from one large cell to a ball of
    cells (blastula) through a series of cleavage
    events
  • Does not increase in size
  • Neural tube, which becomes the spinal cord and
    brain, forms at the end of gastrulation
  • Embryo hatches into tadpole
  • Tadpole goes through metamorphosis

47
Embryogenesis in Frog
48
Early Development in Humans
  • Human eggs are released into the fallopian tube
    by the ovary
  • After fertilization zygote goes through cleavage
    as it goes down the fallopian tubes
  • Embryo undergoes implantation into the wall of
    the uterus, and the placenta forms
  • Placenta carries nutrients to and waste from the
    developing fetus

49
Early Development in Humans
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