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BIOL 370 – Developmental Biology Topic #6. A First Look at Early Development: Rapid Specification in Snails and Nematodes. Lange.
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BIOL 370 – Developmental Biology Topic #6 A First Look at Early Development:Rapid Specification in Snails and Nematodes Lange
Metazoans - a group (Metazoa) that comprises all animals that are multicellular and eukaryotic with bodies composed of cells differentiated into tissues and organs. • There are 35 metazoan phyla taxonomically. • The four MAJOR branches of metazoans that comprise the 35 phyla are: • Sponges • Diploblasts • Protostomes • Deuterostomes
Following fertilization: • The cell begins significant protein synthesis • DNA synthesis • The cell cycle begins • The next steps in development involve the process of cleavage - the division of cells in the early embryo. The different cells derived from cleavage are called blastomeres and form a compact mass called the morula. Cleavage ends with the formation of the blastula.
G1 checkpoint (restriction point) S Growth and DNA synthesis G2 Growth and final preparations for division G1 Growth M G2 checkpoint A typical rendition of the cell cycle.
Cell cycles of somatic cells and early blastomeres The amphibian blastomere uses cyclin B to regulate its two stage cell cycle. Think about how this will promote division without growth. The typical somatic cell also uses cyclin B, but other cyclins as well. Go represents a variation in the growth (aka “gap”) phase specific to differentiating cells.
In embryology, cleavage is the division of cells in the early embryo. • The zygotes of many species undergo rapid cell cycles with no significant growth, producing a cluster of cells the same size as the original zygote. • The different cells derived from cleavage are called blastomeres and form a compact mass called the morula. • Cleavage ends with the formation of the blastula.
Steps associated with induction of cleavage: • MPF – mitosis promoting factor – induces the stages of mitosis (prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase). • MPF cyclicityis guided by cyclin B. • The initial activation of MPF leads to alternating M and S phases with no gap phases. • As the cytoplasm components for M & S are used up, the nucleus will then begin to synthesize these components. This is when the MBT (mid-blastula transition) phase begins. This is when the growth “gap” phases arise.
Steps related to cleavage: • Karyokinesis – mitotic division of the nucleus, driven by the mitotic spindle • Cytokinesis – the division of the cell itself, involving the contractile ring of actin microfilaments
To understand cleavage, we need additional vocabulary: • Vegetal pole – the yolk rich region • Animal pole – the yolk devoid region • Isolecithal – roughly equal distribution of yolk (such as in sea urchins) • Holoblastic cleavage – complete cleavage • Meroblastic cleavage – partial cleavage where only some of the cytoplasm is cleaved (insects, fish, reptiles, birds) • Centrolecithal – centrally placed yolk (insects) • Telolecithal – only one area is free of yolk (birds and fish) • Discoidal cleavage – cleavage in the telolecithal eggs that occurs only in the small disk of cytoplasm • Holoblastic cleavage subtypes: • Radial • Spiral • Bilateral • Rotational
Summary of the main patterns of cleavage We will focus on each type of cleavage in greater detail in the next few slides.