Title: Early Development
1Early Development
2Early Development
- Highly variable among different organisms
- Common genetic and cellular mechanisms in
development - Begins with gametogenesis
- Proceeds in ordered phases
3Phases of Human Development
4Gametogenesis and Fertilization
5Gametogenesis
- 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
6Sperm 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)
7Sperm 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
8Sperm Structure and Function
9Egg 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
10Egg 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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12Fertilization
- 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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14Fertilization
- 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
15Species 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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17Blocking 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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19Fertilization 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
20Fertilization 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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22Endosperm
- Endosperm provides nutrients for the embryotic
development, germination and early seedling growth
23Animal Cleavage and Gastrulation
24Cleavage
- 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
25Cleavage
26Cleavage
- Cells can divide at right angles to one another,
forming tiers in a pattern called radial cleavage
27Cleavage
- Divide at oblique angles so that they pile up in
a pattern called spiral cleavage
28What 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
29Activating 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
30Embryonic 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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32Gastrulation
- 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
33Gastrulation
34Gastrulation
- 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
35Plant Development
36Plant Life Cycle
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38Embryogenesis
- 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
39Embryogenesis
- 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.
40Invertebrate Development
41Embryogenesis 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
42Embryogenesis in Fruit Fly
43Embryogenesis 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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45Vertebrate Development
46Embryogenesis 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
47Embryogenesis in Frog
48Early 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
49Early Development in Humans