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We hope you have enjoyed this limited-length demo
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1. Stem cells from the early embryo
- Prof. Janet Rossant
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2. A chemical approach to controlling cell fate
- Prof. Sheng Ding
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3. Niche oncogenesis
- Prof. David T. Scadden
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4. Gene expression analysis of pluripotent stem cells
- Dr. Uma Lakshmipathy
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5. Cellular therapies for neurological Injuries: bioreactors, potency, and coagulation
- Prof. Charles S. Cox, Jr.
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6. The aging of mitotic cells: regeneration and aging
- Dr. Aubrey de Grey
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7. Stem cells derived from amniotic fluid and placenta
- Prof. Anthony Atala
-
10. Cardiac stem cell therapy
- Prof. Joshua M. Hare
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11. Stem and progenitor cells from peripheral blood
- Prof. Shay Soker
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12. Stem cells from adipose tissue
- Dr. Adam J. Katz
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13. Human hepatocyte isolation for clinical transplantation
- Prof. Stephen Strom
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14. Building implantable human liver tissue from pluripotent stem cells
- Prof. David C. Hay
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Preimplantation embryo development (1)
- Preimplantation embryo development (2)
- Three cell types in the mouse blastocyst
- The first chimeras
- Blastocyst reconstitution experiment
- E 7.5 reconstituted blastocyst chimera
- Injection of rough and smooth cells from E4.5 ICM
- Primitive endoderm contribution to gut progenitors
- Fate of the three cell types of the blastocyst
- Extraembryonic lineages pattern the body axis
- Lineage-specific transcription factors: E3.5
- Cdx2 is restricted to outside cells
- Cdx2 mutant blastocyst (1)
- Cdx2 mutant blastocyst (2)
- Cdx2 expression initiates lineage segregation
- Compaction, polarization and lineage segregation
- Hippo/Wrts growth control pathway
- Yap localization correlates with Cdx2 expression
- Lats kinase regulates localization of Cdx2
- Lats1/2 and Yap control Cdx2 expression
- Current pathway of ICM/trophectoderm fate
- Epiblast and primitive endoderm decision
- Primitive endoderm segregated to ICM surface
- How does primitive endoderm form? (1)
- Salt and pepper’ expression of Nanog and Gata6
- How does primitive endoderm form? (2)
- Mosaicism is lost in Grb2-/- E3.5 embryos
- Absence of primitive endoderm in Grb2-/- E4.5
- Levels of FGF influence EPI versus PE fate
- Levels of FGF influence EPI versus PE fate
- Model of primitive endoderm formation
- Can we derive lineage-specific stem cell lines?
- Three lineage-specific progenitor cell lines
- Culture conditions and stem cell development
- Same signal is used in two different ways
- Conclusions
- The mouse blastocyst – a lineage formation model
Topics Covered
- Stem cells from the early mammalian embryo
- mouse embryonic development
- blastocyst reconstitution experiments
- lineage specific transcription factors
- lineage specific stem cell lines
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Rossant, J. (2014, June 2). Stem cells from the early embryo [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/KNXR8449.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Janet Rossant has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Gynaecology & Obstetrics
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello.
My name is Janet Rossant.
I'm a senior scientist at the
Hospital for Sick Children
in Toronto and
Professor of Molecular
Genetics at the
University of Toronto.
This talk is going to
be about stem cells
from the early mammalian embryo.
0:15
Early mammalian development is
the stage of development of which
the zygote, a single fertilized egg,
develops through to the blastocyst.
The blastocyst is the
stage of development
from which we can derive
embryonic stem cells.
And as I'll show you
later, in the mouse
we can also derive other stem
cells that represent some
of the extra embryonic lineages
that a mammalian embryo
uses to survive in the uterus.
If we look at the stages of
mouse development shown here,
these stages from a single cell
to the blastocyst take four days.
And we see that the embryo undergoes
a process known as cleavage
in which the cells
continue to divide,
but don't specialize until
it begins to cavitate to form
a blastocyst with three
distinct cell types.
The outer, trophectoderm, enclosing
a group of cells at one end
called the inner cell
mass, which then go on
to form epiblast and
the primitive endoderm.
1:10
In this slide, we see some
real images of mouse embryos
during these stages of
preimplantation development.
And in fact, these images go
right back to the oocyte stage
through to the blastocyst.
We see a process where the oocyte
matures, fertilization occurs
to form the zygote, and then the
embryo starts to undergo cleavage.
All of these embryos are shown
without their encompassing zona
pellucida, which is
kind of an egg shell
that protects the embryo
in the uterine environment.
However, it allows us to
see the cells very clearly.
The next event that occurs around
a two-cell to four-cell stage
is a process of genome
activation where
the zygote genome becomes active.
The embryo continues to divide
and undergoes a process called
compaction at the
8- to 16-cell stage
where instead of seeing these
single cells we now have something
that's called a morula
where all the cells are
very compacted against each other.
As we will see later, this
is a very important event
as it starts to establish
an inside environment
and an outside
environment leading up
to the formation of the blastocyst.