Cell interactions and cell movements in development focusing on gastrulation Flashcards

1
Q

What is the generation of form called?

A

Morphogenesis - this means literally shape creation.

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2
Q

What are the key cellular properties involved in generating animal embryonic form?

A

Cell adhesiveness, cell shape changes and cell motility.

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3
Q

What is cell adhesiveness?

A

When animal cells adhere to one another and the ECM (extracellular matrix) through interactions involving cell surface proteins known as adhesion molecules. Changes in adhesion molecules can have effects on the tissue.

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4
Q

What are cell shape changes?

A

Cells can change shape by internal contractions and constrictions - this is caused by cytoskeletal rearrangements and is crucial in many developmental processes such as folding or rolling of a cell sheet.

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5
Q

What is cell motility?

A

This is also called cell migration - this is the ability of many types of cell to move as individuals or as groups from one location to another. It is crucial to development as many processes involve the guided coordinated movement of cells from their origin to their final location.

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6
Q

What are the two groups that cells in embryos can be classified as and how are they classified?

A

Epithelial cells and mesenchymal cells due to properties of cell adhesion and motility.

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7
Q

What are epithelial cells?

A

A sheet of cells, each joined to it’s neighbour by cell to cell adhesion. They are usually organised into sheets or tubules that are attached to an underlying basement membrane.

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8
Q

What are mesenchymal cells?

A

Scattered cells, embedded in loose extracellular matrix (ECM). There is little to no contact with adjacent cells and it fills up much of the embryos and later forms the fibroblasts, adipose tissue, smooth muscle and skeletal muscle.

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9
Q

Where are epithelial cells found?

A

In all 3 germ layers.

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10
Q

Where are mesenchymal cells found?

A

In the ectoderm and mesoderm.

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11
Q

What are epithelia held together by?

A

Cell junctions - a specialised site on a cel. at which it is attached to another cell.

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12
Q

What is a cell junction?

A

A specialised site on a cell at which it is attached to another cell.

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13
Q

What are basal epithelia?

A

Cells joined to the matrix.

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14
Q

What are apical epithelia?

A

Cells to joined to other epithelial cells.

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15
Q

What is apico-basal polarity?

A

The idea that epithelia have polarity due to the presence of junctions on their apical surface and interacting with the basal membrane on the basal surface.

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16
Q

What are cadherins?

A

Calcium dependent transmembrane proteins that protrude from the cell. In the presence of Ca2+ ions, caherins on adjacent cells will stick together in a zipper like fashion.

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17
Q

What are integrins?

A

A large family of proteins found in the extracellular matrix. They bind to matrix molecules (collagen, fibronectin, laminin, proteoglycans) and have two subunits - alpha and beta.

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18
Q

What is an adherens junction made up of?

A

Actin filaments, cadherin, alpha catenin and beta catenin. The cadherens are linked to intracellular proteins called catenins that link to the actin cytoskeleton. Adherens junctions are present in many tissues.

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19
Q

What is a focal adhesion junction made up of?

A

Actin filaments, integrin and focal adhesion kinase. Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) links integrins to the actin cytoskeleton.

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20
Q

What is a desmosome made up?

A

Intermediate filaments, caherin, plakoglobin and desmoplankin. The cadherins are linked to the plakoglobin (intracellular protein) that is connected to the intermediate filament proteins (such as keratin). Desmosomes are mainly in epithelia.

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21
Q

What is a hemidesmosome made up of?

A

Intermediate filaments, integrin and dystonin. The dystonin links integrins to intermediate filaments.

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22
Q

What structures are important in cell to cell adhesion?

A

Adherens junctions and desmosomes. Both are made up of cadherin.

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23
Q

What structures are important in cell to matrix adhesion?

A

Focal adhesion and hemidesmosomes - both contain integrins.

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24
Q

What are apical junctions?

A

Both adherens junctions and desmosomes. They mechanically link all of the cells within the epithelial sheet.

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25
Q

What are calcium independent cell adhesion molecules?

A

Members of the large immunoglobulin superfamily.

26
Q

What is an example of a calcium independent cell adhesion molecule?

A

N-CAM - the neural cell adhesion molecule.

27
Q

What are the binding features of calcium independent cell adhesion molecules?

A

Some mediate homophilic binding (bind to each other) whereas others are heterphilic - which bind to integrins.

28
Q

What are basal junctions?

A

Focal adhesions and hemi-desmosomes. They allow integrins to transmit information about the extracellular environment to the cell and these signals can affect cell shape, motility, differentiation and metabolism.

29
Q

What can changes in cell-adhesion molecules on the cell surface cause?

A

They can alter the strength of cell-cell interactions and specificity.

30
Q

How have differences in cell adhesiveness been proven?

A

Experiments involving different embryonic tissue being confronted with each other in an artificial setting.

31
Q

Give an example of an experiment to prove cell adhesiveness.

A

Pieces of late ectoderm and endoderm were placed together. They initially fused to form a smooth sphere, but in time separated until there is only a narrow bridge of tissue connecting the two together.

32
Q

What happens if you try and fuse early ectoderm and mesoderm and why?

A

The tissues do not separate as they normally adhere to each other in the blastula. The mesoderm usually envelops the ectoderm as they express complimentary adhesion moleculesso can interact with one another.

33
Q

What causes differential adhesiveness?

A

Differences in the types and numbers of adhesion molecules they have on their surfaces.

34
Q

How is cadherin cell type specific? Give an example.

A

N-cadherin is expressed in cardiac muscle cells, VE-cadherin is expressed in endothelial cells. If two cells are expressing different cadherins or different amounts of the same cadherin are mixed, they organise into like.

35
Q

What happens if different tissues are disaggregated into single cells and the cells are mixed together to allow reaggregation?

A

Like cells preferentially associate with like cells.

36
Q

What happens if ectoderm and mesoderm from amphibian blastulas are disaggregated into single cells and mixed back together?

A

They sort out with mesoderm cells on the outside.

37
Q

How are changes in cell shape performed?

A

Constrictions and contractions of the cytoskeleton.

38
Q

What is the cytoskeleton?

A

An intracellular protein framework made up of actin filaments, microtubules and intermediate filaments.

39
Q

What is characteristic about actin filaments and microtubules?

A

They are dynamic structures that polymerise and depolymerise depending to the cells requirements.

40
Q

What is characteristic about intermediate filaments?

A

They are more stable, forming rope-like structures that transmit mechanical forces, spread mechanical stress and provide mechanical stability to the cell.

41
Q

What can actin filaments do with myosin?

A

It can assemble into contractile structures that act as mini muscles.

42
Q

What is the contractile ring?

A

Bundles of actomyosin. The contraction of this pinches the cell into two.

43
Q

What is apical constriction?

A

The contraction of a ring of actomyosin arranged around the apical end of a cell that leads to apical constriction and elongation of the cell.

44
Q

How does cell migration occur?

A

Cells extend a thin sheet-like layer of cytoplasm (lamellipodium, pushed outwards from the cell by assembly of actin filaments. Contraction of the actomyosin assembly at the front of the cell then draws the cell forward.

45
Q

What are the basic steps in cell motility?

A

Protrusion of the leading edge, adhesion at the leading edge, deadhesion at the trailing edge and movement of the cell body.

46
Q

How does adhesion at the leading edge occur in cell motility?

A

Actin rearrangement allow the cell to send out lamellipodia at the leading edge where it makes new attachments with the substratum. The cell is stretching and the cytoskeleton is under tension.

47
Q

How is tension released in cell motility?

A

At the rear end there is deadhesion.

48
Q

What morphogenetic processes underlie diverse forms of embryo?

A

Involution and invagination, cavitation, epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), convergent extension, epiboly, delamination and ingression.

49
Q

What are morphogenetic processes controlled by in the embryo?

A

Inductive signals and regulatory genes.

50
Q

What is involution?

A

A layer of cells “roll in” to form two separate lines.

51
Q

What is invagination?

A

When a layer of cells creates an indent to form a bend in the structure.

52
Q

What can involution and invagination result in?

A

A multilayered structure from a single epithelium.

53
Q

How does involution and invagination arise?

A

Changes in cell shape caused by contraction of cytoskeletal filaments. There is localised contraction in actomyosin filaments in a few cells that changes their shape. Because all of the cells are mechanically linked, the whole sheet is drawn in at the point of the original contraction.

54
Q

Give an example of when involution occurs.

A

Involution occurs during gastrulation of the frog embryo. Cells in the marginal zone undergo apical constriction of the cytoskeletal network which causes them to elongate. This in turn draws the sheet in causing it to involute.

55
Q

What is cavitation?

A

The formation of a hollow ball or tube - this is an alternative to invagination.

56
Q

How does cavitation occur?

A

Fluid filling or apoptosis of cells in a solid mass.

57
Q

Give an example of cavitation.

A

Blastocyst formation. Sodium ions are actively pumped across the basolateral surface of the outer layer of the trophectoderm cells. Blastocoel compartment then inflates as water moves in through osmosis. Water is prevented from escaping by the presence of tight junctions in the apical regions of the cells. This creates a hydrostatis pressure that is one of the forces that gives the blastocyst its spherical shape.

58
Q

What is EMT?

A

Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. It is the conversion of an epithelium into a more loosely connected mass of mesenchyme or into individual mesenchymal cells that can migrate - this is frequent in early development.

59
Q

What occurs in EMT?

A

There is dissolution of adherens junction between epithelial cells, migration of cells out of an epithelium.

60
Q

What is MET?

A

Mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition. It results in the polarisation of motile cells, it establishes cell-cell contacts through formation of adherens juncrtions and creates an organised epithelium.

61
Q

What is convergent extension?

A

When a sheet of cells changes shape due to active rearrangement of cells. The axes must already be defined. Cells become elongated in direction of right angles to the anterior-posterior direction. THey also become aligned parallel to one another in a direction perpendicular to the direction of tissue extension. Each end of these bipolar cells form filopodia, allowing them to exert traction of the neighbouring cells and on the underlying substratum and to shuffle in between each other.

62
Q

What is epiboly?

A

Expansion of a sheet of cells to surround and enclose another population. Cells spread and think out, and involves several changes that include cell divison, alternation in cell shape and intercalation of cells.