Title: Lecture 2 The diversity of development
1Lecture 2The diversity of development
2Multicellular development
Plants Green algae
animals
fungi
Slime molds
Colonial protists
600-1000 Myr ago
protists (single-celled eukaryotes)
A few independent solutions
3Metazoan animals
- Division of labor multiple cell types distinct
germline and soma - Tissues, organs that themselves communicate
- Distinct embryonic stages
- Gastrulation to form three early embryonic
tissues (the germ layers) - Body plan with radial or bilateral symmetry
4model organisms
- most work done on a small set of animals chosen
for practical reasons - The main players
- frog, chick, sea urchin (large, experimentally
accessible) - fly and worm (small but genetically tractable)
- mouse (token mammal)
- development may not be typical of group, e.g.
Drosophila unusual compared to most insects
5describing development
- normal tables of morphological stages
- frog Nieuwkoop Faber stages 1-46
- chick
- before laying stages I- XIII (Kochav
Eyal-Giladi) - after laying Hamburger-Hamilton (HH) stages
1-46 - Carnegie stages use features common to all
vertebrates (including humans) - mouse constant developmental rate in uterus, so
staged by days post coitum - e.g. E9.5 means embryonic day 9.5 p.c.
- also staging by somite number
6Metazoan topology
Outer epithelial layer ectoderm
Middle mesenchymal layer mesoderm
gut
Inner epithelial layer endoderm
three germ layers, so triploblastic cnidarians
lack mesoderm, so diploblastic (primitive?)
7epithelia and mesenchyme
- epithelia made of polarized cells held together
by cell-cell and cell-ECM junctions - mesenchyme tissue made up of scattered
individual cells in an extracellular matrix (ECM) - all three germ layers can make both epithelial
and mesenchymal tissues
Slack Fig 4.7
8Body axes
W 1.13
Shorthand to describe asymmetries of body Most
animals bilaterally symmetric around the
head-tail (anterior-posterior, AP)
axis Back-front differences define the
dorsoventral (DV) axis, usually 90 to AP
axis left-right axis constrained by first two
9Oocyte axis
animal pole
asymmetry of oocyte or early embryo often
referred to as the animal-vegetal axis (most
obvious in sea urchins, amphibians,
ascidians) Cell asymmetry that subsequent
processes build on to form embryonic AP or DV
axis, --but NOT the same as them
female pronucleus
yolk
vegetal pole
10A dozen eggs
- Animals
- Triploblastic
- Platyhelminths-- flatworms (4)
- Coelomates
- Protostomes
- Lophotrochozoa molluscs (3)
- Ecdysozoa nematode (5) and fruit fly (6)
- Deuterostomes
- echinoderms sea urchin (1)
- chordates
- tunicates ascidians (7)
- vertebrates
- frog (8) fish (9,10), bird (11), mammal (12)
- Slime molds (2)
11(No Transcript)
12Some movies online
- Center for Cell Dynamics
- http//raven.zoology.washington.edu/celldynamics/i
ndex.html - Timelapse movies of early development, lots of
unusual organisms - Society for Developmental Biology Cinema
- http//www.sdbonline.org/dbcinema/
- Rather limited but some good stuff
- Bioclips project
- http//bioclips.com/index.php3
- Fancy animations, mostly cell biology
13Eggs
- Variables Size of egg and amount and
distribution of yolk - Yolk complex mixture of proteins (containing
the 9 essential amino acids) and lipids
(phosphate-rich) - Yolk always made by somatic cells, taken up by
oocytes, stored in membrane-bound vesicles
(platelets)
14Sea urchins
W Fig 6.12
- many small eggs, not much yolk
- animal-vegetal asymmetry
- Cleavage holoblastic with radial symmetry
- larvae have bilateral symmetry, adults radial
symmetry
15Cellular slime molds (Dictyostelium discoideum)
The SLUG differentiation , pattern formation
Aggregation of amoebae directed cell migration
Wolpert pp 212-216
Morphogenesis of slug into fruiting body
16Roundworms (Nematodes)Caenorhabditis elegans
- small number of cells (959 in adult)
- cells divide in invariant pattern from worm to
worm - rotational, holoblastic cleavage rapid
development to larval stage - Lecture 13-14
17Insects the fruit-fly, Drosophila melanogaster
Nuclei in early fly embryo, courtesy Bill
Sullivans lab
- early mitoses without cytokinesis--embryo is a
syncytium - yolk in center of egg nuclei move to surface
- cellularization to form blastoderm, then
gastrulation - Lectures 9-12
18Chordates
- 3 subphyla
- vertebrates
- cephalochordate
- urochordates
- Defined by embryonic structure, the notochord
- Made by dorsal mesoderm
- Cartilaginous rod, becomes intervertebral disks
(in vertebrates) - Other features dorsal nerve cord, pharyngeal
slits, post-anal tail
W Fig 15.2 Amphioxus cephalochordate
W Fig 6.19 ascidian larva expressing GFP in
notochord
19Ascidians (tunicates, sea squirts)
W Fig 6.20
- Small eggs, little yolk
- Myoplasm (yellow crescent)
- Cleavage holoblastic, radial first cleavage
meridional - Invariant development
20Amphibian development Xenopus laevis
Animal hemisphere (pigmented in some species)
Vegetal hemisphere (yolky)
Cleavage is holoblastic, radial Vegetal
blastomeres bigger
21Frog gastrulation
- Invagination at blastopore (dorsal)
- cells move into blastocoel to form archenteron
(gut) by convergence and extension movements - Anterior end becomes mouth
W Fig 2.6
22Frog neurulation
- Elongation along anteroposterior axis
- dorsal ectoderm (neural plate) folds into neural
tube
W Fig 2.7
23Fish development
- meroblastic cleavage confined to non-yolky part
of egg
Cleavage and gastrulation resemble frog but are
more constrained by yolk
24Bird (chick) development
- Gigantic super-yolky eggs
- Cleavage confined to blastoderm (2 mm)
- discoidal cleavage, generates blastodisc of
60,000 cells at time of laying - best vertebrate embryo for studying organogenesis
W Fig 2.10
25Chick cleavageformation of epiblast and
hypoblast
- epiblast will give rise to embryo
- hypoblast makes extra-embryonic tissues (needed
for prolonged development in eggshell)
26Chick gastrulation
- Epiblast cells migrate into subgerminal space to
become mesoderm, endoderm - primitive streak thickened region where this
happens equivalent to blastopore of frog - Defines future dorsal midline of body
27Chick organogenesis
- Hensens node regresses (moves anterior to
posterior) - somites form from anterior to posterior
- analogous to frog except on a disc, not in a
sphere
28Mammals (mouse)
- small eggs (0.1 mm diameter), little yolk
- Cleavage slow, asynchronous
- Compaction at 8-cell stage to form morula
- makes two populations of cells outer
trophectoderm (TE) and an inner cell mass (ICM) - blastocyst implants into uterus (day 4.5 in
mouse, day 5.5 in human)
29Mouse gastrulation
- trophectoderm gives rise to placenta
- Part of ICM becomes epiblast--the future embryo
- epiblast in rodents is cup-shaped egg cylinder
but gastrulation topologically like that of chick
30Diversity of early development reflects
reproductive strategy
- Many small eggs
- develop rapidly to feeding larval stage that may
undergo metamorphosis to adult - most invertebrates but also e.g. amphibians
- A few large eggs
- usually develop to smaller version of adult
- nourished in egg with large yolk supply (birds)
- nourished in uterus with placenta (mammals)
- amniotes must set aside cells at blastula stage
to make extra-embryonic tissues
31Next questions
- What sets up body axes?
- How are germ layers specified?
- How can similar body plans arise from different
early embryos?