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Gastrulation The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some organs Endoderm: Inside skin- -gut lining, inside layers of skin
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Gastrulation The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Gastrulation The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells)

Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves

Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some organs

Endoderm: Inside skin- -gut lining, inside layers of skin

Page 2: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Gastrulation involves changes in cell shape

and changes in cell adhesion

Page 3: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Cytoskeletal events drive cell shape changes

Contraction of the adhesion belt drives apical constriction(see Alberts Fig 20-26)

Page 4: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

21_24_Adherens_junct.jpg

Alberts Fig. 20-25

Page 5: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

21_21_cell_cell_junction.jpg

E-cadherin

Alberts Fig. 20-22

Page 6: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Types of Movement in Gastrulation

Local inward bucklingof an epithelium

Inward movement of a cell layer around a point or edge

Movement of individual cells or small groups from an epithelium into a cavity

Spread of an outside cell layer (as a unit) to envelop a

yolk mass or deeper layer

Splitting layers of cells (sometimes used to describe

coordinated ingression)

Migration

Movement of individual cells over other cells or matrix

Fig. 5.4

Groups of cells Individual cells

Page 7: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

More complex changes in cell shape can drive elongation or shortening of a flat sheet of cells

15 cells

4 cells

Cell intercalation

Narrowed and lengthened sheet of cells 30 cells

2 cells

“Convergent Extension”

Page 8: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Sea urchin gastrulationOur “simple” model

blastocoel

Fig. 5.14

Page 9: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Sea urchin gastrulationOur “simple” model

Page 10: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Step 1: Primary mesenchyme cells ingress

Mesenchyme cells-cells that are unconnected to one another and operate as independent units

See also Figure 5.16

Outside (apical)

Inside

Page 11: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Primary mesenchyme ingression is drivenby changes in cell adhesionFigure 5.16

Page 12: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Changes in cell adhesion drive the first step of gastrulation

basal lamina and extracellular matrix

Page 13: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Invaginating primarymesenchyme cellsbeginning tomigrate on theextracellular matrixlining the blastocoel

Page 14: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Primary mesenchyme cells migrate along the extracellular matrixusing filopodia to detect chemical cues

Page 15: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Primary mesenchyme cells eventually fuse and form the spicules (skeletal rods)

Figure 5.17

Figure 5.15

Page 16: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Step 2:Apical constriction and changes in the extracellular matrix create a dome-shaped invagination =archenteron (primitive gut)

blastopore = openingFigure 5.19

Page 17: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Apical constriction drives invagination

Page 18: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Invagination of the Vegetal Plate involves changes in the extracellular matrix

(CSPG)

Page 19: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Step 3:Cell intercalation (convergent extension) converts

the dome (archenteron) into an elongated tube

Figure 5.20

Page 20: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Step 4: Secondary mesenchyme cells at the leading edge of the gut tube use filopodia to look for cues at the

animal pole and pull themselves to that site

These secondary mesenchyme cells will become muscle (mesoderm)Ectoderm

Endoderm (gut)Figure 5.21

Page 21: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Figure 5.14Pluteus larva

Pluteus larva

Page 22: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Gastrulation: frogs

Page 23: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

animal

vegetal

Early cleavage in Xenopus

Here is where gastrulation starts

Sea urchin Fig. 7.2

Page 24: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Two functions of the blastocoel: 1. Prevents cells from interacting too soon2. allows space for cell migrations during gastrulation

animal

vegetal

Early cleavage in Xenopus

Page 25: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

A Fate Map of the Xenopus Blastula

Most Exterior Cellsform ectoderm or endoderm

Most Interior Cellsform mesoderm

Fig. 7.5Sea urchin

Mesoderm

Page 26: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

1. Blastopore Formation

(That looks familiar!)

Frog gastrulation: added complexity but similar mechanisms

Fig. 7.6

spermentry

Page 27: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Apical constriction of bottle cells drivesblastopore invagination

Mechanism #1

Figure 7.7Archenteron

Page 28: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

INVOLUTIONaround dorsal lip

Mechanism #2

Marginal Zone Cells

Frog gastrulation: added complexity but similar mechanisms

Fig. 7.6

2. Involution of Marginal zone cells

inside MZ

outside MZ

Page 29: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Types of Movement in Gastrulation

Local inward bucklingof an epithelium

Inward movement of a cell layer around a point or edge

Movement of individual cells or small groups from an epithelium into a cavity

Spread of an outside cell layer (as a unit) to envelop a

yolk mass or deeper layer

Splitting layers of cells (sometimes used to describe

coordinated ingression)

MIGRATION

Movement of individual cells over other cells or matrix

Figure 5.4

Page 30: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Figure 10.7

2. Involution of marginal zone cells

inside MZ

outside MZ

movement of inside MZ cells dependent on ectoderm cells of blastocoel roof secreting fibronectin

Page 31: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Fibronectin is essential for mesodermal cell involution

during gastrulation

Controlembryo

Embryo injectedwith fibronectin competitorYolk Plug

Figure 7.12

Page 32: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

3. Formation of the Archenteron = Convergent Extension of the Dorsal

Mesoderm

convergence and extension

in three dimensions

Figure 7.6

Page 33: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

4. Epiboly of the Ectoderm

Figure 7.6

Page 34: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Types of Movement in Gastrulation

Local inward bucklingof an epithelium

Inward movement of a cell layer around a point or edge

Movement of individual cells or small groups from an epithelium into a cavity

Spread of an outside cell layer (as a unit) to envelop a

yolk mass or deeper layer

Splitting layers of cells (sometimes used to describe

coordinated ingression)

MIGRATION

Movement of individual cells over other cells or matrix

Figure 5.4

Page 35: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

4. Epiboly of the Ectoderm

Figure 7.9

Page 36: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

5. mesenchyme migration

Just like sea urchin

Figure 7.6

Page 37: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Types of Movement in Gastrulation

Local inward bucklingof an epithelium

Inward movement of a cell layer around a point or edge

Movement of individual cells or small groups from an epithelium into a cavity

Spread of an outside cell layer (as a unit) to envelop a

yolk mass or deeper layer

Splitting layers of cells (sometimes used to describe

coordinated ingression)

MIGRATION

Movement of individual cells over other cells or matrix

Figure 5.4

Page 38: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Gastrulation: Mission Accomplished

Endoderm

Mesoderm

Ectoderm

Page 39: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Ectoderm (outer layer) will produce skin & the central nervous system (brain, spinal cord) through later invagination of the neural tube. In vertebrates, migrating neural crest cells form the peripheral nervous system & many other structures, including some bone, cartilage, and connective tissue in the head.

Ectoderm

Page 40: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

MESODERM (middle layer) will produce muscles, connective tissue, blood and blood vessels. In vertebrates also the notochord (progenitor of vertebrae), bones & cartilage, circulatory and urogenital systems (kidneys, gonads).

Mesoderm

Page 41: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

ENDODERM (inner layer) will produce the gut (entire digestive system) and other internal organs that arise as outpocketings of gut in vertebrates such as liver, lungs, pancreas, and salivary glands.

Endoderm

Page 42: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

Fig. 8.15

Fig. 8.20

Cleavage and Gastrulation

Gastrulation

Hatch from Zona Pellucida

Page 43: Gastrulation  The goal is to form three GERM LAYERS (starting from a hollow ball of cells) Ectoderm: Outside skin, nerves Mesoderm: Blood, Muscle, some.

In mammals, gastrulation initiates AFTER formation of the placental connection to mom

Fig. 8.23