Classification of developing structures Developing structures are typically classified by developmental biologists according to their fate. If such terms.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
More than one way to dissect an animal Melissa Haendel ZFIN Scientific Curator.
Advertisements

LAB 7 Animal Development. Development takes place from the time that an organism is conceived to the time that it dies. Includes the development of the.
Animal Evolution Chpt. 32. Multicellular Multicellular Heterotrophic digest within body.
Stem Cell Development Lesson 1 The Science and Ethics of Stem Cell Research.
Chapter 32 Reading Quiz From which kingdom did animals most likely evolve? What is the only group of animals that do not possess “true tissues”? A sea.
Representing Part Relationships Between Developing Structures.
Tissues.  Epithelial – surface, lining body cavities  Connective – hard and soft  Muscle – movement  Nervous - communication.
Tissues Definition: Tissues Definition: Collections of cells.
Introduction to Animals. Characteristics Multicellular Organization Multicellular Organization Heterotrophic Heterotrophic Sexual reproduction and development.
Application of OBO Foundry Principles in GO Chris Mungall Lawrence Berkeley Labs NCBO GO Consortium.
Potential Applications of Embryonic Stem Cells to Biotechnology and Medicine Developmental biologist James Thomson in his Primate Research Center lab.
How does a single cell make a brain???
Animal Architecture Levels of organization in organismal complexity.
Fertilization and Development. Fertilization   The union of sperm and ovum – –Forms a zygote  The ovum completes meiosis II following fertilization.
Stem Cell Basics Introduction to Embryonic and Adult Stem Cells.
Gastrulation It is not birth, marriage or death, but gastrulation, which is truly the most important event in your life Lewis Wolpert.
Gastrulation. Gastrulation - The point in embryogenesis where the basic organization of the organism is established. A.Establishment of the three basic.
Introduction to Kingdom Animalia
Chapter 32 – Animal Diversity
Tissues, Organ Systems and Homeostasis Dr. A. Russo-Neustadt Biology 155.
31.3 The Animal Body Plan has Undergone Many Changes
ANIMAL KINGDOM. Main Characteristics Multicellular eukaryotes Heterotrophs Specialized cells; most have tissues Response to stimuli by nervous and muscular.
The Reproductive System Part 2
Zoology and Evolution. Zoology The scientific study of animals What is an animal?
Objective: Intro to Animal Diversity. Heterotrophs that ingest food Multicellular with structural proteins Develop from embryonic layers Animal Characteristics.
Chapter 32 Notes Introduction to Animal Evolution.
Chapter 32 An Introduction to Animal Diversity. Modes of Nutrition Animals differ in their mode of nutrition than plants and fungi. –Animals and fungi.
Animal Kingdom. Animals… Animal life cycles include a period of embryonic development. Three germ tissue layers called ectoderm, endoderm, and mesoderm.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Introduction to Animal Diversity Packet #76 Chapter #32.
Development and Growth. Embryology So…meiosis gives us gametes which unite through fertilization to form a fertilized zygote. Now what?
Embryonic Development VARIATIONS IN EMBRYONIC GERM LAYERS AND BODY CAVITY.
Intro to Animal Diversity Chapter 32. Slide 2 of 17 Animalia – General Notes  1.3 million species  300K plant species  1.5 million fungi  >10 million.
BIO624: Developmental Genetics GASTRULATION PART I Suk-Won Jin, Ph.D.
Embryonic Stem Cells and Embryology. What are embryonic stem cells?  derived from embryos that develop from eggs that have been fertilized in vitro 
Unit #6 Cell Division: Mitosis Do we get larger because our cells increase in size or because we produce more of them? The cells of an adult are no larger.
Development Links - Biology. Components of Development Growth - The process of a multicellular increasing its number of cells, becoming larger. (i.e.
Chapter 10 Animal Growth and Development. Fertilization The beginning of new animals begins with fertilization. Fertilization has three functions: 1.transmission.
Image from:
Chapter 25 “What is an Animal” Development of Animals Most animals develop from a single, fertilized egg cell called a zygote. After fertilization the.
HUMAN EMBRYOLOGY.
Onard Mejino Structural Informatics Group Department of Biological Structure University of Washington The Foundational Model of Anatomy (FMA) Ontology:
Know:.patterns of cleavage.sequence of events from fertilization – blastula – gastrula – adult organism. Types of movement during gastrulation. Cleavage.
Developmental Biology An Introduction. Animal Development How has the study of development changed? How has the study of development changed?
1 UNIT 3 PART 4: EMBRYOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT In the early stages of development the organism is called an embryo. The basic processes of development are.
OVERVIEWOF STEM CELLS Lecture 45 By Dr. Khaled Khalil.
WARM UP 11/17 1. Write 5 main things that you learned from Ch 3 on the cells. 2. What is a tissue? 3. When do you believe life starts? At fertilization,
An Introduction to Animal Diversity
I. Organogenesis - germ layers now arranged according to ultimate positions in body - germ layers interact to form organ rudiments.
Image from:
EARLY DEVELOPMENT & GERM LAYERS Dr. Saleem Shaikh.
Biology, 9th ed, Sylvia Mader
Chapter five Oviparous and Viviparous Embryo development
By Fayez A. Elmabhouh Department of Biology
EMBRYOLOGY.
Chapter 32: An Overview of Animal Diversity
Multicellular eukaryotes Heterotrophy by ingestion
Embryology Definition: the study of the origin and development of an organism Prenatal period: before birth 38 weeks from conception to birth (average)
Basic Embryology.
Tooth development.
Who is in the Kingdom Animalia?
An introduction to animal diversity
Kingdom Animalia.
Stem Cell Research Stem Cell Development Lesson 1
Germ layers: Cell lineages
Contributions of Mammalian Chimeras to Pluripotent Stem Cell Research
Fertilization and Embryonic Development
Animal Development Chapter 47
The Cellular Basis for Animal Regeneration
Introduction to Animals
Presentation transcript:

Classification of developing structures Developing structures are typically classified by developmental biologists according to their fate. If such terms are to find a home in CARO, they also need a structural definition

Developing structures that are structurally types of tissue(?)

FMA Definition of tissue Anatomical structure which consist of similarly specialized cells and intracellular matrix, aggregated according to genetically determined spatial relationships.

anlage (synonym: field (?)) Contiguous tissue contributing all or the majority of its cells to one or a few mature structures but not (yet) having distinct morphological boundaries. % determinate anlage Contiguous tissue contributing all of its cells to one or a few mature structures but not (yet) having distinct morphological boundaries. % non-determinate anlage Contiguous tissue defined by lineage labelling as contributing the majority of its cells to some specified mature structure but not (yet) having distinct morphological boundaries. (Also inclusive and specific, as for promordium - see next slide… but this is tangled !!!!)

Primordium (synonym: rudiment (?)) Contiguous tissue contributing all of its cells to one or a few mature structures and having morphologically distinct boundaries. % inclusive primordium Contiguous tissue contributing all of its cells to a few mature structures and having morphologically distinct boundaries. % specific primordium Contiguous tissue contributing all of its cells to a single mature structure and having morphologically boundaries. Note – anlage, primordium distinction is largely down to presence of boundaries, should this be reflected in different structural categories?

germ layer Primary division of embryo established just prior to &/or during gastrulation. Initially constituting a contiguous tissue contributing all of its cells a large but limited set of mature anatomical structure. is_a ectoderm is_a endoderm is_a mesoderm … compartment Contiguous tissue consisting of cells unable to cross a *compartment boundary* to mix with cells in a neighbouring tissue with which it is contiguous during development.

Developing structures that can be structurally defined as anatomical sets (?)

Germ layer derivative An anatomical structure which is derived from the a single germ- layer. % mesodermal derivative an anatomical structure derived from the mesoderm. Notes: 1.individual anlage and primordia can be is_a children of these terms. 2.At what stage, if any, do we stop classifying developing structures in this way?

These terms have multiple primordia and anlage as parts. Different parts are instantiated at different stages. Developing system (e.g.- developing nervous system) Developing (cardinal) body part – e.g.- developing head Developing organ (e.g.- developing brain) Developing X terms

Miscellaneous structural types of developing structure

Mesenchyme Not defined by developmental fate or potential. Perhaps better defined purely structurally? [Note – mesenchyme is a mass noun (as opposed to a count noun – like neuron. Should be referred to as ‘portion of mesenchyme’ according to Barry.] compartment boundary (Genus is_a 'anatomical line' (?)) A boundary that cuts across a contiguous tissue separating it into two groups of cells that do not mix during development. Compartment boundaries have few, if any, morphological correlates, at least while they function as barriers.

Differentia Note that there are two types of fate based differentia working to define these terms: 1.Is the fate mapping probablistic (some defined percentage of cells in the structure have a specific fate) or deterministic (all the cells in the structure have a specific fate) 2.Will the structure contribute to 1 (more) mature structures, or multiple (more) mature structures. Can we cope with these while keeping is_a siblings disjoint?