Implantation and Germ layers Flashcards

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1
Q

When does implantation occur?

A

around 6 days, blastocyst adheres to endometrium on posterior wall of the uterus

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2
Q

What is the trophoblast’s role in implantation?

A

decidual reaction - digestion of uterine lining

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3
Q

Structure of inner cell mass

A

Primitive ectoderm surrounds amniotic cavity
primitive endoderm surrounds caity of yolk sac
(blastocyst wall is 2 layered)

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4
Q

What is ectopic implantation?

A

blastocyst implants outside uterus, typically in fallopian tube
can damage uterine epithelium

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5
Q

What occurs after implantation?

A

EEM covers amnion and yolk sac (joined by connecting stalk)

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6
Q

What is the bilaminar disc?

A

where the ecto and endo lie flattened against each other

where majority of fetus is formed

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7
Q

Summary of week 2

A

2 layers - ectoderm and endoderm
2 cavities - amniotic and yolk sac
2 trophoblast derivatives - cyto and syncytio

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8
Q

What happens to the bilaminar disc in week 3?

A

converted into trilaminar disc by gastrulation:

ectoderm cells migrate through the primitive streak to form the intraembryonic mesoderm of the embryo

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9
Q

What is derived from the ectoderm?

A

skin cells, nerve cells, pigment cells

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10
Q

What is derived from the intraembryonic mesoderm?

A

cardiac, skeletal, and smooth muscle

RBCs and tubule cells

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11
Q

What is derived from the endoderm?

A

lung cells, digestive cells and thyroid cells

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12
Q

What is the primitive groove?

A

faint groove along longitudinal midline of the germ disc, which lengthens and deepens over next few days

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13
Q

What is the primitive pit and node?

A

a deeper depression at the cranial end of the embryo, near the centre of the germ disc
mound of ectoderm surrounding the pit

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14
Q

What is the primitive streak?

A

primitive groove + pit + node

establishes the longitudinal axis of the embryo

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15
Q

What are the two faint depressions that appear within the ectoderm?

A
  1. cranial end, adjacent to prechordal plate - buccopharyngeal membrane
  2. caudal end, behind primitive streak - cloacal membrane
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16
Q

Are the CM and BPM bilaminar? Why or why not?

A

Yes, their ectoderm fuse tightly with the endoderm (excluding intraembryonic mesoderm)

17
Q

What do the cloacal membrane and buccopharyngeal membrane develop to become?

A

endings of the gut tube

CM - anal end

18
Q

What can the cells that migrate during gastrulation do?

A
  1. rest in the midline in a dense mass, cranial to the primitive pit - prechordal plate
  2. rest along the midline in a dense mass, caudal to the primitive pit - notochordal process
  3. rest lateral to the midline in a loose sheet-like structure
19
Q

What happens to the notochordal process?

A

grows in length, completely developed at around day 20

PS regresses from cranial to caudal

20
Q

How is the notochord formed?

A

notochordal process completely detaches from the endoderm to form a solid cylinder

21
Q

Role of the notochord on day 20?

A

inducing the neural plate on the surface of the ectoderm

22
Q

Through what process is the neural tube formed?

A

neuralation

23
Q

What occurs in neuralation?

A

NP begins to crease along midline = neural folds
these become more concave to form neural tube enclosing neural canal
fusion of neural folds causes separation of neural tube from ectoderm

24
Q

What is the brain and spinal cord’s precursor?

A

neural tube