Literature DB >> 11180819

Tribolium embryogenesis: a SEM study of cell shapes and movements from blastoderm to serosal closure.

K Handel1, C G Grünfelder, S Roth, K Sander.   

Abstract

Embryogenesis in the beetle Tribolium is of increasing interest to both molecular and evolutionary biology because it differs from the Drosophila paradigm by its type of segment specification (short- vs. long-germ) and by the extensive epithelial envelopes - amnion and serosa - that are typical of most insects but not of higher dipterans. Using scanning electron microscopy of DAPI staged embryos we document development in Tribolium castaneum from blastoderm to completion of the envelopes, recording many details not otherwise accessible; we also provide a time table of the respective stages at 30 degrees C. The nascent blastoderm cells remain basally confluent with the yolksac until after the 13th (=last synchronous) mitotic cycle. The cells in the prospective serosa - the first domain to segregate visibly from the uniform blastoderm - carry surface protrusions likely to contact the overlying vitelline envelope. The embryonic rudiment, the other (and larger) blastodermal domain, gives rise to amnion and germ anlage. In the latter, visible differentiation begins with a "primitive pit" reminiscent of the posterior midgut rudiment of Drosophila. The subsequent invagination of the mesoderm resembles Drosophila gastrulation, except in the head region where the median groove extends through the entire preoral region. The prospective amnion starts differing visibly from the germ anlage during early gastrulation. It then folds underneath the spreading serosa and, advancing with the latter, closes the amniotic cavity at the ventral face of the germband. The largest (=posterior) amniotic fold covers a crestlike protrusion of the yolksac. Together with marked changes in the shape and arrangement of the amnion cells, this protrusion may contribute to the fold's elevation and early progress.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11180819     DOI: 10.1007/s004270050301

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Genes Evol        ISSN: 0949-944X            Impact factor:   0.900


  37 in total

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2.  Tribolium embryo morphogenesis: may the force be with you.

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4.  Comparisons of the embryonic development of Drosophila, Nasonia, and Tribolium.

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5.  Tribolium castaneum twist: gastrulation and mesoderm formation in a short-germ beetle.

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Journal:  Dev Genes Evol       Date:  2004-11-30       Impact factor: 0.900

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9.  Decoupling from yolk sac is required for extraembryonic tissue spreading in the scuttle fly Megaselia abdita.

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10.  Tc-knirps plays different roles in the specification of antennal and mandibular parasegment boundaries and is regulated by a pair-rule gene in the beetle Tribolium castaneum.

Authors:  Andrew D Peel; Julia Schanda; Daniela Grossmann; Frank Ruge; Georg Oberhofer; Anna F Gilles; Johannes B Schinko; Martin Klingler; Gregor Bucher
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