Differentiation
Differentiation
The process of transformation into a different cell type
What is the end point of the development process?
Completely differentiated cells
Mesenchyme
Loosely organized blast cells, usually mesodermal
Characteristics of differentiated cells
1) Specialized cellular structure and/or function 2) Slow or arrested cell cycle progression 3) impaired ability to transform into other cell types
How does the degree of differentiation change throughout development?
Increases during development
How does the number of differentiated cells change throughout development?
Increases during development
Are tissues with highly differentiated cells able to regenerate?
No, as cells become differentiated their ability to divide diminishes and they lose the ability to proliferate. If they can't proliferate, they can't replace themselves.
Development
Progressive proliferation and differentiation of cells from the zygote to the adult.
Neoplasia
abnormal, new growth
Blastomeres
cells from cleavage stage embryos or blastocysts
Generalized cell types
cells lacking specialized characteristics
Stem cells
cells that differentiate into other cell types. They either divide into more stem cells or they differentiate when they divide
Undifferentiated cell types
cells that have not transformed inot a specialized cell type
Progenitor or precursor cells
cells that must differentiate into other cell types and so cannot propagate their own population
Specialized cell types
cells with distinctive morphological characteristics and/or molecular processes
Anaplasia
dedifferentiation to an embryonic cell type
Growth factors
hormones that control cell cycle progression, cellular differentiation or morphogenesis development
Autonomous specification
intracellular signals (within a cell) controlling cellular differentiation
Hormones
none nutrient chemicals secreted by one cell to induce a response in another cell
Intercellular induction
signals between cells controlling cellular differentiation
Differentiated cell types
specialized cells with limited or no ability to transform into other cell types
Blast cells
stem cells from any embryonic stage
Determination
the final phase, when commitment becomes irreversible
Specification
the first phase in commitment, when the fate is still reversible
As development progresses, how do stem cell populations change?
the populations become restricted to produce some cell types but not others (hence, they are pluripotent)
Totipotency
to have the potential to differentiate into any cell type and produce an entire organism (germ line, gametes, zygotes and early blastomeres)
Pluripotency, multipotency
to have the potential to differentiate into multiple cell types
Dedifferentiation
to reverse the process of differentiation. For a specialized cell to transform into a less specialized cell type
Where does the process of development and differentiation begin?
totipotent zygote and early blastomeres
Metaplasia
transformation of one differentiated cell type to another
Commitment
when the developmental fate of a cell becomes restricted, so that it will differentiate in a specific manner