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  2. Gastrulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastrulation

    Before gastrulation, the embryo is a continuous epithelial sheet of cells; by the end of gastrulation, the embryo has begun differentiation to establish distinct cell lineages, set up the basic axes of the body (e.g. dorsal–ventral, anterior–posterior), and internalized one or more cell types including the prospective gut. [2]

  3. Gastruloid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastruloid

    Gastruloids lack brain as well as extraembryonic tissues but characterisation of the cellular complexity of gastruloids at the level of single cell and spatial transcriptomics, reveals that they contain representatives of the three germ layers including neural crest, Primordial Germ cells and placodal primordia. [12] [13]

  4. Archenteron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archenteron

    The cells continue to be rearranged until the shallow dip formed by invagination transforms into a deeper, narrower pouch formed by the gastrula's endoderm. This pouch narrows and lengthens to become the archenteron, a process driven by convergent extension. The open end of the archenteron is called the blastopore.

  5. Histogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histogenesis

    The endoderm is one of the germ layers formed during animal embryogenesis. Cells migrating inward along the archenteron form the inner layer of the gastrula, which develops into the endoderm. Initially, the endoderm consists of flattened cells, which subsequently become columnar...

  6. Neurulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurulation

    As neurulation proceeds after induction, the cells of the neural plate become high-columnar and can be identified through microscopy as different from the surrounding presumptive epithelial ectoderm (epiblastic endoderm in amniotes). The cells move laterally and away from the central axis and change into a truncated pyramid shape.

  7. Polarity in embryogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polarity_in_embryogenesis

    The animal hemisphere is dark brown, and the vegetal hemisphere is only weakly pigmented. The axis of symmetry passes through on one side the animal pole, and on the other side the vegetal pole. The two hemispheres are separated by an unpigmented equatorial belt. Polarity has a major influence on the emergence of the embryonic structures.

  8. Dorsal lip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorsal_lip

    The dorsal lip of the blastopore is a structure that forms during early embryonic development and is important for its role in organizing the germ layers. [1] The dorsal lip is formed during early gastrulation as folding of tissue along the involuting marginal zone of the blastocoel forms an opening known as the blastopore. [2]

  9. Epiblast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epiblast

    The epiblast was first discovered by Christian Heinrich Pander (1794-1865), a Baltic German biologist and embryologist. With the help of anatomist Ignaz Döllinger (1770–1841) and draftsman Eduard Joseph d'Alton (1772-1840), Pander observed thousands of chicken eggs under a microscope, and ultimately discovered and described the chicken blastoderm and its structures, including the epiblast. [1]