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Human Development: Fertilization through gastrulation

Human Development: Fertilization through gastrulation. Michael M. Shen, Ph.D. Departments of Medicine and Genetics & Development Columbia University Medical Center. Gastrulation movements in the frog embryo. Vegetal view. From blastula to gastrula. The first week of development.

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Human Development: Fertilization through gastrulation

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  1. Human Development:Fertilization through gastrulation • Michael M. Shen, Ph.D. • Departments of Medicine and Genetics & Development • Columbia University Medical Center

  2. Gastrulation movements in the frog embryo Vegetal view

  3. From blastula to gastrula

  4. The first week of development • Fertilization • Cleavage stages • Blastocyst formation • Early lineage specification • Implantation

  5. The second week of development • Trophoblast differentiation • Yolk sac formation • Anterior-posterior axis patterning • Initiation of gastrulation

  6. The third week of development • Endoderm and mesoderm ingression • Mesoderm lineage specification • Left-right patterning • Neural plate formation • Axial midline formation

  7. Pre-implantation mouse development • Reductive cleavage • Blastomere potency • Inside-outside allocation of lineage progenitors • Compaction • Blastocyst formation • Emerging morphological asymmetry

  8. Fertilization Cleavages Compaction Blastocyst formation Human embryo development in culture

  9. Early cleavages of the mouse embryo (Bischoff et al. (2008))

  10. Key properties of vertebrate embryogenesis • Regulative development Early blastomeres are totipotent

  11. Regulative development of the vertebrate embryo (DeRobertis (2006))

  12. Gene expression at pre-implantation stages in the mouse Zygotic genome activity Mid-preimplantation genome activity (Wang and Dey (2006))

  13. Cell types of the blastocyst Primitive ectoderm (epiblast) Trophectoderm Primitive endoderm

  14. Specification of early lineages (Wang and Dey (2006))

  15. Nanog expression Epiblast Gata6 expression Primitive endoderm Model for primitive endoderm (hypoblast) specification Inner cell mass Trophectoderm (Chazaud et al. (2006))

  16. Pluripotency of mouse ES cells Can contribute to all embryonic cell types in chimeras – including the germ line

  17. TS cells ES cells EpiSC cells XEN cells Early lineages and stem cells in the mouse embryo Mouse EpiSC cells resemble human ES cells

  18. Process of implantation

  19. Formation of extraembryonic tissues

  20. Key properties of vertebrate embryogenesis • Regulative development • Patterning at a distance by soluble morphogens

  21. Two major signaling pathways regulate early patterning and differentation

  22. Schematic pathway for canonical Wnt/beta-catenin signaling Wnt ligand absent Wnt ligand present

  23. Schematic pathway for TGF-beta signaling

  24. (Cripto, Cryptic) The Nodal signaling pathway

  25. Key properties of vertebrate embryogenesis • Regulative development • Patterning at a distance by soluble morphogens • Common patterning mechanisms underlie distinct embryo morphologies

  26. Schematic of early mouse development (Adapted from Hogan et al. (1994))

  27. Morphological relationship between mouse and human embryos Cup-shaped vs discoid human mouse Extraembryonic ectoderm Extraembryonic endoderm Mesoderm Definitive endoderm Ectoderm (Eakin and Behringer)

  28. Key properties of vertebrate embryogenesis • Regulative development • Patterning at a distance by soluble morphogens • Common patterning mechanisms underlie distinct embryo morphologies • Antagonism of secreted ligands and inhibitors

  29. Specification of the anterior-posterior axis in the mouse Nodal and Cripto activity Nodal inhibitor activity (Lefty, Cerberus)

  30. Movement of the anterior visceral endoderm View from anterior side

  31. Relationship of blastodisc to implantation site

  32. Formation of the primitive streak Anterior Node Streak Posterior Expression of Brachyury in chick embryo

  33. Early embryogenesis in the chick Anterior Posterior

  34. Ingression of nascent endoderm and mesoderm through the streak • Delamination of epiblast cells • Movement through the streak • Initial ingression of endoderm • Subsequent ingression of mesoderm

  35. Anterior and lateral migration of mesoderm • Anterior migration of mesoderm: • Axial (prechordal) • Cardiac • Lateral distance from midline determines mesoderm type: • Axial (e.g., notochord) • Paraxial (somites) • Intermediate (e.g., kidney) • Lateral (e.g, limbs)

  36. Axial Paraxial Intermediate Chick embryo Somatic Splanchnic Regional differentiation of mesoderm

  37. Anterior-posterior patterning of axial mesoderm

  38. Key properties of vertebrate embryogenesis • Regulative development • Patterning at a distance by soluble morphogens • Common patterning mechanisms underlie distinct embryo morphologies • Antagonism of secreted ligands and inhibitors • Instructive inductive interactions

  39. Induction of secondary axis (DeRobertis and Kuroda (2004)) Spemann-Mangold organizer experiment Blastopore lip transplantation

  40. Injection of Wnts or Nodal can induce a secondary axis • Injection of mRNA into dorsal marginal zone • Wnt8 (complete axis) • Nodal (partial axis)

  41. Formation of the neural plate Macaque embryo (similar to 20 day human embryo)

  42. Inductive interactions and head formation AVE Anterior visceral endoderm EPI Epiblast NE Neural progenitor EGO Early gastrula organizer PS Primitive streak

  43. Dorsoventral patterning by axial and paraxial mesoderm

  44. Holoprosencephaly in Cripto hypomorphs

  45. Defective forebrain patterning and axial mesoderm formation

  46. Spectrum of human holoprosencephaly

  47. Complex L-R laterality of tissues (Kosaki and Casey (1998))

  48. Situs solitus:normal organ position Situs inversus: complete reversal of organ position Isomerism: mirror image duplication of tissue morphology Heterotaxia: discordant and randomized organ position Nomenclature for L-R laterality phenotypes (Capdevila et al. (2000))

  49. Nodal flow model Stages of L-R laterality determination • Initial symmetry breaking

  50. Initial symmetry breaking Propagation and maintenance of an asymmetric signal Specification of tissue-specific laterality Asymmetric gene expression Stages of L-R laterality determination

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