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BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm [email protected] Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday 2:00- 4:00 (or by appointment)

BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm [email protected] Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

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Page 1: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

BIO 127 – Developmental BiologyFall 2011

Dr. Tom [email protected]

Humboldt Hall 211E916-278-6152

Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday 2:00-4:00 (or by appointment)

Page 2: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Course Organization

• Section I: Developmental Terms and Processes• Section II: Early Development• Section III: Development of Organ Systems I• Section IV: Development of Organ Systems II• Section V: Late Development and Other Topics

• Labs are designed as extensions of the lectures– Exams will cover both together as a unit

Page 3: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Grades will be based on the result of four exams, 8 laboratory write-ups, the presentation of your poster and participation in the lab as follows:

A(-) > 90%, B(+) > 80%, C(+) > 70%, D(+) > 60%, and F < 60%

Exam 1 Friday 09/16 100 points

Exam 2 Friday 10/07 100 points

Exam 3 Friday 10/28 100 points

Exam 4 Friday 11/18 100 points

Exam 5 Wed. 12/14 100 points

Lab Write-ups 8 total 200 points

Project presentation12/09 50 points

Total Points 750

Page 4: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Bio 127 - Section IDevelopmental Terms and Processes

The Big PictureDevelopmental Anatomy

Gilbert 9e – Chapter 1

Page 5: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

What are we studying?

• The COMPLEX PROCESS: one cell to one hundred trillion cells, over 200 cell phenotypes in humans

• The KEY BIOLOGICAL TRANSITION: genetic inheritance to phenotypic expression

• The SPECIES COMPARISON: all early animal embryos are similar, the earlier the mutation the bigger the potential change

Page 6: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

A VERY COMPLEX PROCESS• Most fields of Biology study the adult

– Anatomy, Physiology, Genetics, Molecular Biology

• One cell to one hundred trillion cells– very tightly regulated cell division and death

• Devo produces 200+ cell types in humans– nearly every one has the same genotype– how do they express different genes so they can change?

• Cells, tissues, organs, systems, regulation???

Page 7: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Some of the key terms of Developmental Biology

Page 8: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

The three embryonic germ layers

Just a few of the 200+ cell types......

Page 9: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Fig. 13-6

Key

Haploid (n)

Diploid (2n)

n nGametes

nn n

Mitosis

MEIOSIS FERTILIZATION

MEIOSIS

2n 2nZygote2n

Mitosis

Diploidmulticellularorganism

Animals

Spores

Diploidmulticellularorganism(sporophyte)

Plants and some algae

2n

Mitosis

Gametes

Mitosisn

nn

Zygote

FERTILIZATION

nn

nMitosis

Zygote

Most fungi and some protists

MEIOSIS FERTILIZATION

2n

Gametes

n

n

Mitosis

Haploid multi-cellular organism(gametophyte)

Haploid unicellular ormulticellular organism

Sexual Life Cycles

Page 10: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

THE KEY BIOLOGICAL TRANSITION

• Genetic inheritance to phenotypic expression– XX = female adult, XY = male adult (in some organisms)– Globin genes carry mutation for sickle cell– Gigantism can be caused by mutations in a-subunit of G-protein Gs9

• Developmental Biologist wants to know.....– What’s on the X and Y chromosome?– When is it expressed? How does it change sex?– Why are globin genes expressed only in RBC? Why does it persist?– a-subunit of G-protein Gs9 - how does that cause large size?

Page 11: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

THE SPECIES COMPARISON

• Much is learned from studying organisms that develop the same way, as well as those that do it differently

Such as...• All early animal embryos are similar• The earlier a mutation, or other event,

occurs, the bigger the potential change

Page 12: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Figure 1.10 Similarities and differences among vertebrate embryos during development

Page 13: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Sometimes the adults are quite different but the embryos give away the closeness of two species

Page 14: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Figure 1.19 Homologies of structure among human arm, seal forelimb, bird wing, and bat wing

Page 15: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Some more key ideas

• Developmental Mechanisms of Regeneration

• Development’s Role in Evolution• The Impact of the Environment on

Developing Organisms

Page 16: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Bio 127 - Section IIntroduction to Developmental Biology

Developmental AnatomyGilbert 9e – Chapter 1

Page 17: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Fertilization

Birthing (hatching)

Maturity

Death

Fertilization

Birthing (hatching)

embryogenesis

post-embryonic development

gametogenesis

post-embryonic devoand senescence

Page 18: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

The frog is a classic model organism

Frog Post-Embryonic Development is verydifferent from ours

Page 19: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Figure 1.2 Early development of the frog Xenopus laevis

CLEAVAGE

BLASTULATION

FERTILIZATION

EGG = GAMETEanimal

vegetal

The result isa “blastula”

Page 20: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

GASTRULATION FORMS THE GERM LAYERS

ORGANOGENESIS

neurulationmarks thebeginning oforganogenesis

“gastrula”

“neurula”

the tadpole is a “larva”

Page 21: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Figure 1.4 Metamorphosis of the frog POST-EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT: METAMORPHOSIS

Page 22: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Fig. 13-5

Haploidgametes

Egg

Sperm

MEIOSIS FERTILIZATION

Multicellularadults

DiploidZygote

The Human Life Cycle

-Embryogenesis-Post-Embryonic Development

-Senescence

Page 23: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

ART ANDANATOMYARE THE BACKBONE OFUNDERSTANDINGDEVELOPMENT

The greatest progressive mindsof embryology have not lookedfor hypotheses; they have looked at embryos..... ....Jane Oppenheimer

1672 1908

1817

1981

Page 24: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Drawing is still a very important skill in Developmental Biology but this semester we will employ the digitaltechnologies that are available to us to generate thecritical visual communications required to learn DB.

- Digital cameras- Image software- Google Images- University websites- Wikipedia- Sac CT

Page 25: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

• Like all of our sciences, Developmental Biology, had to wade through a time before we knew about cell and molecular biology and digital communications.

– No doubt there are other discoveries coming that will change how we view these processes in the future.

– We’ll study it in the context of what we know now.

(Don’t let that stop you from being amazed by the genius of Aristotle!)

Page 26: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

This class is going to teach you a LOT of terminology!

Let’s start with some Aristotle classics......

Oviparity = hatched from an egg (birds, amphibians, most reptiles and fish, inverts)

Viviparity = born live (placental mammals, some fish and reptiles)

Ovoviviparity = born live from eggs hatched in mom (!)(sharks, some reptiles)

What is the platypus?

Page 27: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Aristotle Plus Modern Biology...

1. everybody’s born from an egg and

2. cleavage is the first developmental stage after fertilization of that egg, so...

meroblastic cleavage = some of the egg cell divides to embryo cells, while some just goes for nutrition

holoblastic cleavage = all of the egg cell divides to cells, some embryonic and some extraembryonic

Page 28: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Remember: The Germ Layers

formed during gastrulation

This is one of the major morphological determinants of taxonomy in Animalia. Of the nine phyla in the kingdom, 7 are triploblastic and 2 are diploblastic.

Page 29: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

The Blastopore

formed during gastrulation

This is anotherkey taxonomicdeterminant: 2 phyla of 9in Animalia form the anus here, the restform the mouth at theblastopore.

deuterostomesv.

proteostomes

Page 30: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

The Notochord

Only membersof phylumChordata makea notochord.

(of the three sub-phyla, only Vertebrata makes a spine out of it.)

Page 31: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Evolution of pharyngeal arches in the vertebrate head

This is also acharacteristicfound only inChordata.

early embryo adult fish

adult reptile human

Page 32: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

von Baer’s Laws:

1. The general features of a large group of animals appear earlier in development than do the specialized features of a smaller group.

2. Less general characters develop from the more general, until finally the most specialized appear

3. The embryo of a given species, instead of passing through the adult stages of lower animals, departs more and more from them.

4. Therefore, the early embryo of a higher animal is never like a lower animal, but only like its early embryo.

Page 33: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Keeping Track of Moving Cells in the Embryo

– A key difference between embryos and adults is cell movement

• Nearly all embryo cells are on the move• Only limited types of cells move in the adult

- There are two types of moving cells in the embryo- Epithelial cells adhere to each other, move as a group- Mesenchymal cells live and move as individuals

Page 34: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Tissue Morphogenesis results from.....

– Direction and number of cell divisions

– Cell shape changes

– Cell movement

– Cell growth

– Cell death

– Changes in the composition of the cell membrane or secreted products

– Cell differentiation is an obvious omission!

Page 35: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Important Term: Mesenchymal to Epithelial Transition

Page 36: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday
Page 37: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Important Term: Epithelial to Mesenchymal Transition

Page 38: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday
Page 39: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Fate Maps: Mapping the Movements of Cells in the Embryo

The idea is to....

1. Pick a developmental stage and a group of cells in the embryo that you want to study

2. Find a way to visually distinguish those cells from all of the rest

3. Find your cells again during and at the end of the stage and make a map of their fate

Page 40: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Figure 1.11 Fate maps of vertebrates at the early gastrula stage

The value offate mappingis clear from this figure, which showsthe commonorganizationof embryoseven when theshapes differ.

Page 41: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

1. Direct observation of pigmented cells in the embryo

2. Marking small groups of cells in the early embryo with dyes

3. Replacing embryonic cells of one species with those of another that look different

4. Replacing embryonic cells with those from the same species carrying transgenes

The process has gotten more sophisticatedas our tools have gotten better and better.

Page 42: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Fate map of the tunicate embryo

Page 43: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Direct observation of pigmented cells in the embryo (sea urchin larva)

Page 44: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Vital dye staining of amphibian embryos

The first experimentalfate maps allowedinvestigators to putcolor wherever and wherever needed.

Page 45: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Fate mapping using a fluorescent dye

Powerful fluorescent dyes allowed investigators to take theirfate map studies much later into development of the embryo.

Page 46: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Genetic markers as cell lineage tracers

Chick and quail are so similar thatthey won’t immunologically rejectthe others’ cells plus quail havevery large nucleoli and the cells areeasy to distinguish from chick cells.

Page 47: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Figure 1.16 Chick resulting from transplantation of a trunk neural crest region from an embryo of a pigmented strain of chickens into the same

region of an embryo of an unpigmented strain

Chick andquail can also grow up with eachother’sparts!

Permanentfate maps!

Page 48: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Fate mapping with transgenic DNA shows that the neural crest is critical in making the bones of the frog jaw

Now we can fate map nearlyany embryo, atnearly any cellor stage, withmolecular tools.

Page 49: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Evolutionary Developmental Biology (EvoDevo)

Similarities and Differences Between Embryos Can Define Most Taxonomic and Evolutionary Relationships

• This idea pre-dates Darwin• A center pin of “Origin of the Species”• Two things show in the embryo:

– Commonalities show common ancestry– Modifications show adaptations to environments

• Combined with von Baer: – Evolutionary modifications of related species

should come later in development than those of distant species

Page 50: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Homology vs. Analogy

• Homologous structures arise from a common ancestral structure

• Analogous structures share a common function that has arisen independently in the two (or more) organisms

Page 51: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Larval stages reveal the common ancestry of two crustacean arthropods

Page 52: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Homologies of structure among human arm, seal forelimb, bird wing, and bat wing

Page 53: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Development of bat and mouse

Page 54: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

How does developmental biology contribute to this evolution?

• Mice, humans and bats all start with two forelimb bones and five digits with webbing in between

• Bat wing has more rapid growth rate in finger cartilage making digits longer

• Bat wing also has a block to cell death in the webbing making them connected

Page 55: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Analogous Wing Development

Page 56: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Selectable variation through mutations of genes active during development

Page 57: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

How does developmental biology contribute to this evolution?

• Humans bred the dachsund to go into badger dens during the hunt

• Unknowingly, we selected for an extra copy of fibroblast growth factor 4 (Fgf4)

• Fgf4 tells leg cartilage to stop growing and differentiate into bone

• An independently acquired mutation, a truncated Fgf5 gene, allows overgrowth of the hair shaft in long-haired dachsunds

Page 58: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

• Between 2% and 5% of humans are born with visible developmental abnormalities

• some are caused by mutations• some are caused by environmental disruptions of

development

• These abnormalities have provided a great deal of insight into normal development

How can these developmental relationships directly affect us?

Page 59: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Causes of Birth Defects- Chromosome anomolies- Single gene defects- Mitochondrial defects- Teratogen exposure

Others:- Imprinting- Sporadic/field defects- Multifactorial- Idiopathic

Page 60: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Chromosomal Anomolies

Trisomy 21 Down’s Syndrome

Page 61: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Single gene mutation

PiebaldSyndrome:KIT mutationreduces celldivision in neural crestcells. These cells give riseto pigmentcells, ear cells,gut neurons,blood cells andgerm cells.

Human syndrome Mouse model

Page 62: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Mitochondrial Defects

Page 63: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Teratogen Exposure

Page 64: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Treatment for Morning Sickness

Thalidomide Syndrome Susceptibility

Page 65: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Environmental Estrogenic Compounds

Increasingly Common Indicator Species

Page 66: BIO 127 – Developmental Biology Fall 2011 Dr. Tom Landerholm landerholm@csus.edu Humboldt Hall 211E 916-278-6152 Office Hours: Wednesday 1:00-2:00, Thursday

Toxic Plants Ingested by the Mother