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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Preface
- Embryogenesis
- Molecular signaling underpins morphogenesis
- Frog development
- Gene expression during development
- Functional homology: swim bladder and lungs
- Homeostasis and repair
- The phylogenetic origins of chronic lung disease
- Myofibroblasts in interstitial pulmonary fibrosis
- Functional genomic homology: SB and lung
- Enriched unigenes in the SB
- Post-hatching development of swim bladder
- Gravity and PTHrP
- PTHrP is sensitive to gravitational force
- From in-vitro to in-vivo
- Effect of zero gravity on bone
- Evolution and physiology interrelationship
- Cholesterol deletion and alveolar homeostasis
- Compensation for cholesterol deletion
- Fibroblasts compensate for cholesterol deletion
- The importance of PTHrP in lung development
- Gene mutation affected by water to land transition
- Evolution of the glucocorticoid receptor
Topics Covered
- Ontogeny, the ‘short history’ of the organism
- Embryogenesis, blastula to gastrula
- Molecular signaling and morphogenesis
- Alternating extrinsic/intrinsic selection pressure
- Swim Bladder-Lung homology
- Continuum from ontogeny to phylogeny, homeostasis, repair
- PTHrP necessary for alveolarization
- PTHrP, Glucocorticoid and βAdrenergic Receptor gene duplications
- Evolution of Endothermy
Talk Citation
Torday, J.S. (2016, March 31). How to ‘deconvolute’ lung evolution - vertebrate ontogeny - the ‘short history’ of evolution [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/QCHR6094.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. John S. Torday has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
How to ‘deconvolute’ lung evolution - vertebrate ontogeny - the ‘short history’ of evolution
Published on March 31, 2016
11 min
Other Talks in the Series: Evolutionary Physiology
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
PROFESSOR JOHN TORDAY:
Vertebrate ontogeny,
the short history of evolution.
0:05
Ontogeny,
or embryonic development,
is the short history
of the organism
in contrast to phylogeny,
which is the long
history of the organism.
Beginning with the fertilization
of the egg by the sperm
forming the zygote,
cell-cell interactions dictate
the patterning of the embryo
to generate form and function.
The cell-cell interactions
are mediated
by solute-secreted
growth factors
signaling to nearby cells
that have specific
cognate receptors
for those growth factors.
For example,
fibroblast growth factor
binds to the fibroblast
growth factor receptor.
The receptor then generates
a second messenger
that affects the growth
and differentiation
of the target cell.
The target cell then
generates a growth factor
that acts on other cells
within the region
and so on and so on,
until the entire organism
is formed.
0:51
Here we see the fertilized
egg or zygote on the left,
progressively dividing
and differentiating
to form a two-layered
blastula
and then a three-layered
gastrula
composed of an ectoderm,
endoderm,
and mesoderm.
From this stage on,
the three germ layers
form the embryo
through the cell-cell
growth factor signal.
1:10
On the left are depicted
the interactions
between the various components
of developing bone,
round chondrocytes,
columnar chondrocytes,
prehypertropic chondrocytes,
hypertrophic chondrocytes,
terminal hypertrophic
chondrocytes,
and trabecular bone.
These different bone cell types
interact through signaling,
mediated by PTHrP,
interacting with Indian hedgehog
fibroblast growth factor,
bone morphogenetic protein,
notch, and the wingless
int or Wnt pathway.
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