Developmental biology part 1 : introduction and grey crescent formation
For more information, log on to- http://shomusbiology.weebly.com/ Download the study materials here- http://shomusbiology.weebly.com/bio-m... Embryogenesis is the step in the life cycle after fertilisation -- the development of the embryo, starting from the zygote (fertilised egg). Organisms can differ drastically in how the embryo develops, especially when they belong to different phyla. For example, embryonal development in placental mammals starts with cleavage of the zygote into eight uncommited cells, which then form a ball (morula). The outer cells become the trophectoderm or trophoblast, which will form in combination with maternal uterine endometrial tissue the placenta, needed for fetal nurturing via maternal blood, while inner cells become the inner cell mass that will form all fetal organs (the bridge between these two parts eventually forms the umbilical cord). In contrast, the fruit fly zygote first forms a sausage-shaped syncytium, which is still one cell but with many cell nuclei.[18] Patterning is important for determining which cells develop into which organs. This is mediated by signaling between adjacent cells by proteins on their surfaces, and by gradients of signaling secreted molecules.[19] An example is retinoic acid, which forms a gradient in the head to tail direction in animals. Retinoic acid enters cells and activates Hox genes in a concentration-dependent manner -- Hox genes differ in how much retinoic acid they require for activation and will thus show differential rostral expression boundaries, in a colinear fashion with their genomic order. As Hox genes code for transcription factors, this causes different activated combinations of both Hox and other genes in discrete anteroposterior transverse segments of the neural tube (neuromeres) and related patterns in surrounding tissues, such as branchial arches, lateral mesoderm, neural crest, skin and endoderm, in the head to tail direction.This is important for e.g. the segmentation of the spine in vertebrates. Embryonic development does not always proceed correctly, and errors can result in birth defects or miscarriage. Often the reason is genetic (mutation or chromosome abnormality), but there can be environmental influence (like teratogens) or stochastic events. Abnormal development caused by mutation is also of evolutionary interest as it provides a mechanism for changes in body plan (see evolutionary developmental biology). Source of the article published in description is Wikipedia. I am sharing their material. Copyright by original content developers of Wikipedia. Link- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page

Developmental biology part 2 : clevage of zygote, polarity and differentiation

Embryology | Development of the Placenta

Developmental biology part 3 : Gastrulation

The Complete Cardiology Masterclass: Exam-Ready in One Video

1. Introduction to Human Behavioral Biology

Intro to Chemistry, Basic Concepts - Periodic Table, Elements, Metric System & Unit Conversion

Ancient Human Species We Once Co-Existed With

Building an Amazing Underground Den Deep in the Wild | Full Process

Nervous System Regulation (999 Hz) | 1 hour handpan music | Malte Marten

Machine Learning for Everybody – Full Course

Antineoplastic Agents | Clinical Medicine

CSIR NET life science developmental biology

'Listen Like You Might Be Wrong': Harvard Student Goes Viral For Stunning Speech On Trump Amid Feud

Soil Is Alive: The Living World Beneath Our Feet | SLICE EARTH | FULL DOC

Sarah Paine — The war for India (Lecture & interview)

Gastrulation, Neuralation, and Somites!!! | Animated Embryology Series (Part 1.2)

Developmental biology part 5, developmental biology of drosophila

1. Introduction to the Human Brain

121 Psychology Terms You Must Know | Psych 101 Full Glossary

