Cell proliferation & differentiation

56
1 Cell Proliferation & Differentiation in Embryo Development Department of Histology & Embryology Ling xiao

Transcript of Cell proliferation & differentiation

Page 1: Cell proliferation & differentiation

1

Cell Proliferation & Differentiation

in Embryo Development

Department of Histology & Embryology

Ling xiao

Page 2: Cell proliferation & differentiation

• During embryonic development, a fertilized egg gives rise to many different cell types

A Genetic Program for Embryonic Development

Page 3: Cell proliferation & differentiation

3

• During embryonic development, a fertilized egg gives rise to many different cell types

• Cell types are organized into tissues, organs, organ systems, and the whole organism

• Gene expression controls this development

• The transformation from zygote to adult results from cell proliferation, cell differentiation, and morphogenesis.

A Genetic Program for Embryonic Development

Page 4: Cell proliferation & differentiation

4

What is cell proliferation?

• Cell proliferation is a process of cell

division and regeneration, which

results in an increase in the cell

number with exact passages of

genetic information to their daughter

cells.

Page 5: Cell proliferation & differentiation

5

Proliferationof eukaryotic

cell

DNA replication

What is cell cycle?

• Cell cycle is defined as a period from

the end of one division to the

beginning of next division of a

proliferative cell.

Page 6: Cell proliferation & differentiation

6

Phases of the cell cycle

G1 phase

S phase

G2 phase

M phase

Page 7: Cell proliferation & differentiation

7

Phase of cell cycle

• M-Phase

– Mitosis

– Cytokinesis

• Interphase

– G1 = Gap between M and S

– S = Synthesis (DNA and

centrosomes replicated)

– G2 = Gap between S and M

Page 8: Cell proliferation & differentiation

8

Cell Cycle Regulation

• Cyclins

• Cyclin Dependent Kinases (CDKs)

• Cyclin Dependent Kinases Inhibitors (CDKIS)

Page 9: Cell proliferation & differentiation

9

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2001 was awarded jointly to Leland H. Hartwell, Tim Hunt and Sir Paul M. Nurse "for their discoveries of key regulators of the cell cycle".

Leland H. Hartwell Tim Hunt Sir Paul M. Nurse

Page 10: Cell proliferation & differentiation

10

For adult • Cycling cells with continuous division

Embryo cells, hematopoietic cells

• Differentiated cells

Cardiac cells, nerve cells

• Most cells

Skin fibroblasts, SMCs, VECs, cells of

internal organs

Page 11: Cell proliferation & differentiation

11

For Embryo

Page 12: Cell proliferation & differentiation

12

For Embryo

Page 13: Cell proliferation & differentiation

13

For Embryo

Page 14: Cell proliferation & differentiation

14

For Embryo• Cleavage is a series of rapid cell divisions without

cell growth or gene expression which occurs in early embryogenesis.

• Early cleavage divisions in most embryos are reductive. During cleavage, the cytoplasm is divided into smaller and smaller cells, called blastomeres. The total cellular volume of the embryo stays the same, but the number of cells within the embryo increases.

• Cleaving cells have a modified cell cycle, in which the two gap phases, G1 and G2, are completely omitted. The cells cycle rapidly between M and S phases.

Page 15: Cell proliferation & differentiation

For Embryo

• Cleaving cells have

a modified cell cycle,

in which the two gap

phases, G1 and G2,

are completely

omitted. The cells

cycle rapidly

between M and S

phases.

15

Page 16: Cell proliferation & differentiation

16

For Embryo• Morula stage(16-cell stage):

Compaction

Polarity

Page 17: Cell proliferation & differentiation

17

Stages of mouse and human preimplantation development.

(TE: trophectoderm; ICM: inner cell mass ; EPI: epiblast;

PE: primitive endoderm)

Page 18: Cell proliferation & differentiation

18

Page 19: Cell proliferation & differentiation

19

Cockburn K, Rossant J. Making the blastocyst: lessons from the mouse. J Clin Invest. 2010, 120(4): 995-1003.

Page 20: Cell proliferation & differentiation

20

Abnormal Cleavage

• Delay of cleavage: implantation failure

• Irregular cleavage: abnormal zygote

• Polyspermous fertilization: Polyploid

• Enzygotic twins

Page 21: Cell proliferation & differentiation

21

Page 22: Cell proliferation & differentiation

22

Siamese twins

Page 23: Cell proliferation & differentiation

23

Control of early embryo development

• Before genome activation

Maternal-effect genes (miRNAs,

transcriptional factors, DNA

methyltransferase, …)

• After genome activation

Transcriptional factors (Cdx2, Oct4…)

Heat shock proteins

Cytokines…

Page 24: Cell proliferation & differentiation

24

Cdx2Oct4

Page 25: Cell proliferation & differentiation

25

Page 26: Cell proliferation & differentiation

26

When a cell divides by mitosis it

produces two “daughter cells”

with identical sets of chromosomes.

SO, HOW DO THESE CELLS

BECOME DIFFERENT FROM ONE

ANOTHER?

Page 27: Cell proliferation & differentiation

27

What is cell differentiation?

• Cell differentiation is a cellular

events that gives rise to different

kinds of cells with the specialized

morphology, metabolism and

physiological functions from the cells

of the same origin.

Page 28: Cell proliferation & differentiation

28

What is cell differentiation?

Page 29: Cell proliferation & differentiation

29

• Determination commits a cell to its final fate.

• Determination precedes differentiation.

• Cell differentiation is marked by the production

of tissue-specific proteins.

Cell Determination &

Differentiation

Page 30: Cell proliferation & differentiation

30

Cytoplasmic Determinants and Inductive Signals

• An egg’s cytoplasm contains RNA, proteins, and other substances that are distributed unevenly in the unfertilized egg.

• Cytoplasmic determinants are maternal substances in the egg that influence early development.

• As the zygote divides by mitosis, cells contain different cytoplasmic determinants, which lead to different gene expression.

Page 31: Cell proliferation & differentiation

31(a) Cytoplasmic determinants in the egg

Two differentcytoplasmicdeterminants

Unfertilized egg cell

SpermNucleus

Page 32: Cell proliferation & differentiation

32(a) Cytoplasmic determinants in the egg

Two differentcytoplasmicdeterminants

Unfertilized egg cell

Sperm

Fertilization

Zygote

Nucleus

Page 33: Cell proliferation & differentiation

33(a) Cytoplasmic determinants in the egg

Two differentcytoplasmicdeterminants

Unfertilized egg cell

Sperm

Fertilization

Zygote

Mitoticcell division

Two-celledembryo

Nucleus

Page 34: Cell proliferation & differentiation

34(b) Induction by nearby cells

Signalmolecule(inducer)

Signaltransductionpathway

Early embryo(32 cells)

NUCLEUS

Signalreceptor

Page 35: Cell proliferation & differentiation

35

Totipotent Pluripotent Unipotent DifferentiatedTotipotent Pluripotent Unipotent DifferentiatedTotipotent →Pluripotent→ Unipotent →Differentiated

Page 36: Cell proliferation & differentiation

36

Control of Cell Differentiation

– Gene control

– Cell interaction

– Hormones

– Environmental factors

Page 37: Cell proliferation & differentiation

37

Gene control

• Housekeeping Genes serve a function

required in all the cell types of an organism,

regardless of their specialized role. (Helper)

• Luxury genes perform specialized function

in a definite type of cell, not required by all

cell types of an organism. (Determinant)

Page 38: Cell proliferation & differentiation

38

Page 39: Cell proliferation & differentiation

39

Example

• Myoblasts produce muscle-specific proteins and form

skeletal muscle cells

• MyoD is one of several “master regulatory genes” that

produce proteins that commit the cell to becoming

skeletal muscle

• The MyoD protein is a transcription factor that binds to

enhancers of various target genes

Page 40: Cell proliferation & differentiation

40

Embryonicprecursor cell

Nucleus

OFF

DNA

Master regulatory gene myoD Other muscle-specific genes

OFF

Page 41: Cell proliferation & differentiation

41

Embryonicprecursor cell

Nucleus

OFF

DNA

Master regulatory gene myoD Other muscle-specific genes

OFF

OFFmRNA

MyoD protein(transcription

factor)Myoblast(determined)

Page 42: Cell proliferation & differentiation

42

Embryonicprecursor cell

Nucleus

OFF

DNA

Master regulatory gene myoD Other muscle-specific genes

OFF

OFFmRNA

MyoD protein(transcription

factor)Myoblast(determined)

mRNA mRNA

Part of a muscle fiber(fully differentiated cell)

MyoD

Page 43: Cell proliferation & differentiation

43

Embryonicprecursor cell

Nucleus

OFF

DNA

Master regulatory gene myoD Other muscle-specific genes

OFF

OFFmRNA

MyoD protein(transcription

factor)Myoblast(determined)

mRNA mRNA mRNA mRNA

Myosin, othermuscle proteins,and cell cycle–blocking proteinsPart of a muscle fiber

(fully differentiated cell)

MyoD Anothertranscriptionfactor

Page 44: Cell proliferation & differentiation

44

Cell interaction

• Cell induction

• Contact inhibition

• Microenvironment-- extracellular

matrix

Page 45: Cell proliferation & differentiation

45

Cell induction

• Induction is the process by which one group

of cells produces a signal that determines

the fate of a second group of cells.

Page 46: Cell proliferation & differentiation

46

Example

Page 47: Cell proliferation & differentiation

47

Extracellular matrix (ECM)

• ECM can control the differentiation by

influencing the intracellular gene

expressions via signal transduction.

Page 48: Cell proliferation & differentiation

Exogenous ECM prevents the inhibition of skeletal muscle differentiation by proteoglycan synthesis inhibitors.

Osses N , and Brandan E Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 2002;282:C383-C394

Chlorate and BDX can inhibit the proteoglycan synthesis.

Page 49: Cell proliferation & differentiation

49

Hormones

• Steroids

• Peptides

To influence the gene expressions through

binding with the corresponding receptors

Target cells

Page 50: Cell proliferation & differentiation

50

Environmental factors

1) Biological

Viruses:

– rubella virus → cataracts, deafness, cardiac

defects;

– cytomegalovirus → blindness, microcephaly,

hepatosplenomegaly;

Page 51: Cell proliferation & differentiation

51

2) Physical

radiation, mechanical pressure, trauma

Radiation: World War II: atomic bomb

explosion over Japan.

Survived pregnant women:

28% aborted;

25% delivered children died <1 year;

25% infants with CNS malformations.

Page 52: Cell proliferation & differentiation

52

3) Chemical

chemicals: nitrite, mercury, lead, etc.

drugs: thalidomide (amelia and meromelia)

Page 53: Cell proliferation & differentiation

53

4) Others

hypoxia

nutritional deficiencies

…………

Page 54: Cell proliferation & differentiation

54

Susceptible period

1) Dependent on the developmental stage.

The embryonic period (3-8 weeks) is

the highest susceptible period.

Page 55: Cell proliferation & differentiation

55

2) Different organs have different susceptible period corresponding to their own critical development stage.

Page 56: Cell proliferation & differentiation

56

Summary

Embryo development: From one single

zygote to a complex human body

Cell proliferation: Increase of cell numbers

(cleavage)

Cell differentiation: Formation of different

cell types (cell determination)

Control factors: gene, cell communication,

ECM, hormone, environmental factors