What are cytoplasmic determinants?
Define cell specification, differentiation, and determination.
Specification: Initial process in which a cell becomes committed to a specific developmental fate
Differentiation: When a less specialized cell undergoes changes in gene expression and morphology to become specialized
Determination: Cells have undergone molecular changes which make them resist changes in fate
What is the difference between cell determination and differentiation?
Determination is when the cell’s commitment is irreversible after specification. Differentiation is the process of a specified cell undergoing changes in gene expression and morphology.
Is cell specification reversible? Why? How would you experimentally show?
Yes it is, If a cell is specified but is transplanted to a different tissue it will adapt to the tissue. if it has already been determined even if it is transplanted it will go as it would have where it was taken from.
(IMAGE)
What is the difference between instructive and permissive induction?
Instructive induction is when a group of cells sends a signal for another group of cells directing their differentiation. Permissive induction is when a group of cells provide a permissive environment in which responsive cells have more autonomy over what their fate is.
Define what morphogen gradient is and how it is generated. What so important about gradients generated by morphogens important?
(T/F) Epigenesis is the theory that explains how development of a plant or animal from an egg or spore differentiate into an organism.
True
(T/F) During development, if a cell has committed to a particular fate, it is said to be
Differentiated.
False
(T/F) The determination state of a cell is defined by culturing a cell in an artificial medium (saline solution) and observing what tissues form from it.
False
(T/F) In instructive interaction, a signal from the inducing cell is necessary for initiating new gene expression in the responding cell.
True
List key developmental processes required for the formation of multicellular organisms from gametes.
Generation of reproductive cells, Fusion of sperm and egg, Cell Division (mitosis), Generation of diverse cell type, Tissue organization, Postembryonic development
How is a morphogen gradient formed and interpreted by responding cells? Use the following terms: morphogen, threshold, positional information
Morphogens are long-range signaling molecules that pattern developing tissues in a concentration-dependent manner. The graded activity of morphogens within tissues exposes cells to different signal levels (thresholds) and leads to region-specific cell fates (positional information) along the plane of tissue.
What are the differences between maternal vs, zygotic genes? What is zygotic transcription?
When does the basic body plan of a fly embryo established?
What are the advantages of using Drosophila as an experimental model organism?
What are maternal determinants? What do they do?
What is syncytium and how does it influence the early Drosophila development?
What happens during cellularization in Drosophila embryos? At the cellular blastoderm stage, can transcription factors function as morphogens? Why and why not?
Know how cells move around to form different germ layer cells during gastrulation.
~15 Poll cells set aside to become germline cells
- cells that become mesoderm invaginate ventrally
- Gut cells invaginate from anterior to posterior
- Cells that remain outside are ectodermal cells
(T/F) Drosophila gastrulation is completed 10 hours after fertilization.
False
(T/F) The Drosophila embryo contains a large number of nuclei in a single cell surrounding a central mass of yolky cytoplasm. This embryo is at cellular blastoderm
stage.
False
What is the result of the first 12 nuclear divisions of a Drosophila embryo where roughly 6,000 nuclei share a single cytoplasm?
Proteins can diffuse throughout the blastoderm and enter nuclei.
(T/F) During Drosophila gastrulation, anterior and posterior mesodermal cells migrate inside from the two anterior and posterior ends and connect in the middle of the embryo to form body muscles.
False
During Drosophila gastrulation ~15 cells at posterior are set aside to eventually become
____________ cells.
Pole