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Figure 20.1 Sperm and Egg Differ Greatly in Size Figure 20.4 Patterns of Cleavage in Four Model Organisms (Part 1) Figure 20.4 Patterns of Cleavage in Four Model Organisms (Part 2) Figure 20.5 The Mammalian Zygote Becomes a Blastocyst (Part 2) Figure 20.7 Twinning in Humans Two Blastulas The Primary Germ Layers zygote chordates brain, ventral spinal cord, nerve cord spinal nerves blastula lining of respiratory tract pharynx lining of endoderm digestive tract vertebrates epidermis gastrula ectoderm neural crest notochord glands pancreas, liver outer covering of internal organs mesoderm integuments blood, vessels gonads lining of thoracic and abdominal cavities circulatory system gill arches, sensory ganglia, Schwann cells, adrenal medulla heart somites kidney dermis segmented muscles skeleton Figure 20.8 Gastrulation in Sea Urchins Figure 20.9 Gastrulation in the Frog Embryo (Part 1) Figure 20.9 Gastrulation in the Frog Embryo (Part 2) Figure 20.9 Gastrulation in the Frog Embryo (Part 3) Neurulation “For the real amazement, if you wish to be amazed, is this process. You start out as a single cell derived from the coupling of a sperm and an egg; this divides in two, then four, then eight, and so on, and at a certain stage there emerges a single cell which has as all its progeny the human brain. The mere existence of such a cell should be one of the great astonishments of the earth. People ought to be walking around all day, all through their waking hours calling to each other in endless wonderment, talking of nothing except that cell.” --Lewis Thomas Figure 20.15 Neurulation in the Frog Embryo (Part 1) Figure 20.15 Neurulation in the Frog Embryo (Part 2) Figure 20.16 The Development of Body Segmentation Figure 20.10 Spemann’s Experiment Figure 20.11 The Dorsal Lip Induces Embryonic Organization Figure 20.2 The Gray Crescent Figure 20.3 Cytoplasmic Factors Set Up Signaling Cascades Figure 20.12 Molecular Mechanisms of the Primary Embryonic Organizer dorsal epidermal ectoderm NT Wnt motorneurons NT-3 Wnt? dermomyotome sclerotome fp somite BMP-4 FGF5? Shh NC multiple signals pattern the vertebrate neural tube and somite lateral mesoderm Figure 19.9 Embryonic Inducers in the Vertebrate Eye Induction in eye development Figure 19.10 Induction during Vulval Development in C. elegans (Part 1) Figure 19.10 Induction during Vulval Development in C. elegans (Part 2) Origami: sets of instructions (programs) to build 3-D models of organisms out of paper – Is this how developmental programs work? The “landscape” of developmental programs: The determination of different cell types involves progressive restrictions in their developmental potentials. When a cell “chooses” a particular fate, it is said to be determined. Differentiation follows determination, as the cell elaborates a cell-specific developmental program. Determination Differentiation Differentiated Cell Types A B C D E F G H 2-D Electrophoresis of proteins extracted from two different mouse tissues Mouse Liver Proteins Mouse Lung Proteins Sets of gene products in two cell types A A&B B Cell types A & B share a common set of “housekeeping” gene products and a set of unique “luxury” gene products that represent the A or B developmental program Figure 19.2 Developmental Potential in Early Frog Embryos Figure 19.3 Cloning a Plant (Part 1) Figure 19.3 Cloning a Plant (Part 2) Figure 19.4 A Clone and Her Offspring (Part 1) Figure 19.4 A Clone and Her Offspring (Part 2) Figure 19.4 A Clone and Her Offspring (Part 3) Figure 19.5 Cloned Mice 21_41_cloning.jpg What is a stem cell? stem cell determined cell differentiated cell 21_39_hemopoietic.jpg Recent breakthroughs in stem cell research : - stem cells can be obtained from adults and embryos/fetal tissue - stem cells are multipotent! -this very likely has theraputic value The “landscape” of developmental programs: The determination of different cell types involves progressive restrictions in cellular developmental potentials. When a cell “chooses” a particular fate, it is said to be determined. Differentiation follows determination, as the cell elaborates a cell-specific developmental program. Determination Differentiation Differentiated Cell Types A B C D E F G H Uses of human embryos • obtain stem cells • somatic cell transfer, then obtain stem cells • use stem cells that are coaxed to develop into different tissues for therapeutic purposes Figure 20.14 A Human Blastocyst at Implantation Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Figure 19.6 The Potential Use of Embryonic Stem Cells in Medicine (Part 1) Figure 19.6 The Potential Use of Embryonic Stem Cells in Medicine (Part 2) Figure 19.7 Asymmetry in the Early Embryo (Part 1) Figure 19.7 Asymmetry in the Early Embryo (Part 2) Figure 19.8 The Principle of Cytoplasmic Segregation Figure 19.9 Embryonic Inducers in the Vertebrate Eye Figure 19.11 Apoptosis Removes the Tissue between Fingers Figure 19.12 Organ Identity Genes in Arabidopsis Flowers (Part 1) Figure 19.12 Organ Identity Genes in Arabidopsis Flowers (Part 2) Figure 19.13 A Nonflowering Mutant Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Embryo Hatching larva Movement of maternal mRNA Follicle cells Nurse cells Posterior Oocyte Anterior Three larval stages Nucleus Fertilized egg a. c. Metamorphosis Syncytial blastoderm d. Cellular blastoderm Nuclei line up along surface, and membranes grow between them to form a cellular blastoderm. Thorax Head Abdomen Segmented embryo prior to hatching b. e. Egg with maternally-deposited A mRNA P bicoid nanos Gradients of informational proteins encoded by maternal mRNA Gap Genes hunchback Krupple Knirps Pair RuleGenes Segment Polarity Genes Homeotic Genes Figure 19.15 A Gene Cascade Controls Pattern Formation in the Drosophila Embryo Fig. 19.13 Figure 19.14 Bicoid and Nanos Protein Gradients Provide Positional Information (Part 1) Figure 19.14 Bicoid and Nanos Protein Gradients Provide Positional Information (Part 2) hunchback & Krupple - gap class even skipped - pair rule class fushi tarazu (ftz) & even skipped (eve) - pair rule class engrailed - segment polarity class Fig. 19.17 wild-type Antennapedia mutant Fly heads Fig. 19.18 wildtype mouse Hoxb-4 knockout