6.1 Chicken Development Flashcards
5 reasons Chick embryos as model systems
- Large eggs
- Easy to obtain
- Easy to keep and easy to grow
- Relatively robust, thus good subjects for microsurgery and other manipulations
- Have many organ systems and developmental genes in common with human embryos
What kind of cleavage in chickens
Meroblastic cleavage:
Teleoecithal, Discoidal Cleavage
Telolecithal: Only a small area that is free of yolk
Meroblastic: type -incomplete or partial due to the presence of large volumes of yolk -seen in centrolecithal, telolecithal.
Discoidal meroblastic cleavage: Cleavage is restricted to a small portion of the cytoplasm present on top of the large yolk. Example includes the embryo of aves, where the eggs are telolecithal
Basic Chick Egg Anatomy
- Chalaza: hold egg right way
- 3 layers: amnion yolk sac allantoris chorion albumen
- Blastodisk: small amount of non yolk in chick egg
Explain Egg Layers
Amnion: prevents the embryo from desiccation and stay afloat in fluid enviornment
Yolk Sac: enables nutrient uptake, development of circulatory system
Allantois: stores waste products
Chorion: contain blood vessels that exchange gases with the environment
Albumin: protect the yolk and provide additional nutrition for the growth of the embryo. Stabalizes in center
Where is cleavage in Chickens done
Blastodisk. There’s the area pellucid the inside, the area opaca the outside and the marginal zone which is inbetween. Forms the blastoderm
5 Steps in Chick Cleavage
1) happens at blastodisk
2) forms single layer of cell called blastoderm made of epiblast cells
3) equatorial division causes 5-6 layed thick cells
4) sub germinal layer seperates blastoderm from yolk
5) SGL gives blastoderm a translucent appearance
fluid filled cavity under the 5-6 layer cells of blastoderm that seperates it from the yolk
sub-germinal cavity
thickning of the epiblast at the edge of the area pellucida
koller’s sickle
posteior marginal zone
in between the koller’s sicker and area opaqa
Formation of the second layer of cells
Cells from the epiblast delaminate into the subgerminal space and cells also migrate forward from the posterior marginal zone - now the blastoderm is two layered!
The delaminating and migrating cells combine within the subgerminal space—a definitive blastocoel is formed. Epiblast forms the embryo and the hypoblast forms the extraembryonic membranes
epiblast cells delaminate and stay attached to posterior marginal zone are called
hypoblast island then 5-20 cells migrate and become the primary hypoblast
sheet of cells from the Koller’s sickle grow anteriorly form
secondary hypoblast or endoblast
secondary hypoblast + primary hypoblast
complete hypoblast layer
entire embryo is derived from (along with extra embryonic membranes)
epiblast
Formation of the primitive Streak
- thickening of epiblast (and the Kohler’s sickle) [3-4hrs]
- cell converge form depression called primitive groove [7-8hrs streak, 15-16hrs groove]
- cells move through groove to the deeper layers cells in anterior layer thicken and form hensons’ node (primitive knot) [19-22hrs]
The streak starts at the posterior margin of the epiblast, and elongates anteriorly