Development of the Cardiovascular System 2 Flashcards
How is the heart developed?
- Begins towards the end of week 3 when the cardiogenic field condenses
- 2 angioblastic cords form the heart tubes
- The heart tubes fuse to one when lateral body folding occurs
- the dilations appear and the tube bends forms a bulboventricular loop when the bulbus cordis and ventricle grow
- The first contraction of the heart = day 22
- blood circulates in the 4th week
Explain the genetic Induction of cardiogenic field with the three germ layers
- Endoderm: (perimeters of embryo) This releases BMP2 and 4 which both express NKX2.5 (the master regulator of all cardiac genes)
- Mesoderm: (cranial margin of embryo) This releases NKX2.5
- Ectoderm: (cranial half or embryo) The neural tube releases Wnt3a and 8 which inhibits the development of the heart. To counteract this, the ectoderm ALSO releases crescent and cerberus to inhibit Wnt3a and 8 which activates heart development
Explain the graded expression of RA in the dilations of the heart tube
- happens in the mesoderm
- In the sinus venosus, retinal dehydrogenase expression is increased by its self-made retinoic acid making it specified
- The most caudal part of the heart tube (sinus venosus) is with the highest expression of RA, decreasing towards the cranial end (TA)
List the dilations of the heart tube and its pathway
- Sinus venosus (SV), Truncus arteriosus (TA), Bulbus cordis (BC), Ventricle (V), Atrium (A)
- PATHWAY SV → A → V → BC → TA
What is in the wall of the heart tube and what do they become
- Endothelium: becomes the endocardium
- Cardiac jelly: becomes the subendocardial CT
- Myocardium
- Epicardium: visceral layer of pericardium. forms from mesothelial cells
The heart is suspended from the dorsal wall by the _____ ___________ which its central part later degenerates to form the _________ ___________ _____ which communicated between the left and right sides of the pericardium
- Dorsal mesocardium
- Transverse pericardial sinus
Explain the pathway of primitive circulation
- SV → A → V → BC → TA → Aortic Sac → Aortic Arches → Dorsal Aorta
The dorsal aorta flow to: - The embryo by the intersegmental arteries
- The placenta by the umbilical arteries
- The yolk sac by the vitelline arteries
Where do the veins come from to the sinus venosus
- The cardinal veins go from the embryo
- The umbilical vein grows from the placenta
- The vitelline veins go from the yolk sac
ALL to the sinus venosus
When does the partitioning of the heart occur?
- In the 4th week and is complete at the end of the 8th week
Explain the division of the atrioventricular canal
- This canal separates the atria from the ventricles and the left from the right side of the heart by the endocardial cushions that form on the ventral and dorsal walls
- The AV canal sends inductive signals which makes the endocardial cells go through Epithelial Mesenchymal Transformation (EMT) and invade the ECM
What are the factors for EMT
- TGF-ß1 and TGF-ß2
- BMP-2A and BMP-4
- Slug (zing finger protein)
- ChALK2 (activin-receptor-like kinase)
They also participate in the formation of the endothelial cushions