HE 31-32 GI Development Flashcards
Dorsal Mesentery
Formed by the invagination of the gut tube into the peritoneal cavity
Three germ layers of GI and what they contribute to
Endoderm: mucosal epithelium (and parenchyma of submucosal and accessory glands)
Visceral mesoderm: Lamina Propria, muscularis mucosa, muscularis externa, serosa, adventitia, stroma of accessory digestive glands
Neural Crest: submucosal and myenteric plexuses (enteric nervous system)
Movement of Septum Transversum during Body Folding
Wk 4 the Septum transversum forms at C3-C5 between pericardial sac and yolk sac
(pericardial and peritoneal canals still exist
By week seven it is pushed down with the pleuralperitoneal membranes creating thoracic/abdominal diaphragm
Four major components of septum transversum (adult)
Central Tendon (visceral mesoderm)
Crura: esophageal dorsal mesentery
pleuroperitoneal membranes (dorsal)
muscular ingrowth from body wall
migration of the gut tube (weeks)
week four: gut tube in broad contact with body wall, parietal and visceral peritoneum form their respective mesoderm
week 5: invagination of the gut tube to form Dorsal Mesentary
-Neurovascular connection runs THOUGH dorsal mesentery for the gut tube.
Primary and Secondary Retroperitoneal
primary: never invaginated ie Kidney
secondary: portion of the gut tube invaginated but later will be fused to the wall
Ventral Mesentary location and timing
forms at week four, is the contact between the septum transversum and gut tube
-only at distal esophagus, stomach and proximal duodenum
Regionalization of gut tube at week four
Retinoic acid gradient secreted by visceral mesoderm
-gradient drives SHH expression in Endoderm
-epithelial to mesechymal interaction creates an upregulation in HOX expression in the mesoderm
Nested HOX expression causes endoderm to express region specific genes
SOX 2-esophagus and stomach
PDX1 - pancreas
CDX2 small intestine
CDX1 large intesting
during gut tube formation which two portions of the endodermally lines cavities remain extraembryonic
allantois: urinary bladder and medial umbilical ligament
yolk sac: temporarily connected by vitteline duct
will be obliterated at week 10
Arterial development of vitteline arteries and veins to yolk sac
Vitelline arteries branch off dorsal aorta to supply yolk sac
-pairs gradually fuse to form the celiac trunk, superior mesenteric, and inferior mesenteric
Paired vitelline veins drain blood from yolk sac to sinus venosus
Forgut (overview)
Common blood supply: celiac trunk
abdominal esophagus, spleen, stomach, pancreas, liver, gall bladder, duodenum (superior to major papilla)
Formation of abdominal esophagus
week four respitory diverticulum buds off ventral aspect of the foregut
-tracheoesophageal ridges partition the developing lungs
esophagus initially short, rapid growth from the esophagus of the heart and lungs lengthen it
Stomach rotation
Week four,
Differential growth causes rotation in two axis simultaneously
- longitudinal axis: 90 degree CW rotation
- AP axis rotation CW
- up-rotates pyloric region, down rotates cardiac region
- former anterior side grows slower than former posterior side for greater and lesser curvatures
Dorsal and ventral mesentery are dragged in unison
-ventral megastrium and dorsal megastrium lined in AP plane origionally and dorsal is pulled left
Creation of Greater and lesser omentum and omental foramen
Free edge of ventral megastrium becomes omental foramen (borders?)
ventral megastrium becomes lesser omentum
Dorsal megastrium becomes greater omentum
Omental Bursa: cavity between lesser and greater omentum that is formed by week five. The gastrocolic ligament basically is an extension of the greater omentum and bulges inferiorly extending the omental bursa
-anterior and posterior parts FUSE with eachother and transverse colon reducing the size of the omental bursa
Formation and rotation of duodenum in week four to six
NOTE DUAL ORIGIN (midgut and foregut) separated by major papilla
Follows stomach rotation
- begins at midline extending straight forward
- swings right and makes a C curve on the right side
- most becomes retroperitoneal by rotation pressing duodenum and mesentery to wall (secondary retroperitoneal), only very first part remains intraperitoneal
Week 5-6 rapid growth of mucosal epithelium fills and block lumen with epithelial plug. Soon after apoptosis begins causing recanalization of the canal ( complete week 9)