Blastocoel

The blastocoel (/ˈblæstəˌsiːl/), also spelled blastocoele and blastocele, and also called cleavage cavity, or segmentation cavity is a fluid-filled or yolk-filled cavity that forms in the blastula during very early embryonic development.

At this stage in mammals the blastula develops into the blastocyst containing an inner cell mass, and outer trophectoderm.

Blastocoel
Blastocoel
Mammalian blastocoel
Blastocoel

Schematic diagram showing the blastocyst, with its embryoblast (inner cell mass) and its trophoblast layer, alongside the surface of the endometrium.
Details
Carnegie stage3
Days5
Precursormorula
Gives rise togastrula,
primitive yolk sac
Anatomical terminology

It develops following cleavage of the zygote after fertilization. It is the first cell cavity formed as the embryo enlarges, and is the essential precursor for the differentiated gastrula.[page needed] In the Xenopus a very small cavity has been described in the two-cell stage of development.

In mammals

After fertilization, the zygote undergoes mitotic divisions during rotational cleavage resulting in daughter cells known as blastomeres until they are at the 16-cell stage called the morula. The morula is a solid ball of cells that has a small group of internal cells surrounded by a larger group of external cells. Following further cleavages and compaction the blastomeres undergo cellular differentiation that gives rise to an internal group of cells called the inner cell mass, (also embryoblast) and an external layer of surrounding cells known as trophoblasts. The inner cell mass will go on to become the actual embryo. The external, surrounding cells develop into the trophoblast cells. At this stage there is no cavity within the morula; the embryo is still a ball of dividing cells. In a process called cavitation, the trophoblast cells secrete fluid into the morula to create a blastocoel, the fluid-filled cavity. The membranes of the trophoblast cells contain sodium (Na+) pumps, Na+/K+- ATPase and Na+/H+ exchangers, that pump sodium into the centrally forming cavity. The accumulation of sodium pulls in water osmotically, creating and enlarging the blastocoel. The oviduct cells stimulate these trophoblast sodium pumps as the fertilized egg travels down the fallopian tube towards the uterus. As the embryo further divides, the blastocoel expands and the inner cell mass is positioned on one side of the trophoblast cells forming a mammalian blastula, called a blastocyst.

In amphibians

An amphibian embryo in the 128- cell stage is considered a blastula as the blastocoel in the embryo becomes apparent during this stage. The fluid-filled cavity forms in the animal hemisphere of the frog. However, the early formation of the blastocoel has been traced back to the very first cleavage furrow. It was demonstrated in the frog embryo that the first cleavage furrow widens in the animal hemisphere creating a small intercellular cavity that is sealed off via tight junctions. As cleavage continues, the cavity expands to become the developed blastocoel. The blastocoel is a crucial component of amphibian embryo development. It permits cell migration during gastrulation and prevents the cells beneath the blastocoel from interacting prematurely with the cells above the blastocoel. For instance, the blastocoel prevents the vegetal cells destined to become endoderm from coming in contact with those cells in the ectoderm fated to give rise to the skin and nerves.

Damage to blastocoel

The blastocoel can be damaged and abolished if the adhesion between blastomeres, provided by cell adhesion molecules like EP-cadherin, is destroyed as mRNA by oligonucleotides. If the mRNA is destroyed, then there’s no EP-cadherin, little to no blastomere adhesion and the blastocoel is non-existent. During the next stage of embryonic development, amphibian gastrulation, the blastocoel is displaced by the formation of the archenteron, during mid-gastrulation. At the end of gastrulation, the blastocoel has been obliterated.

In sea urchins

At the 120- cell stage, the sea urchin embryo is considered a blastula because of its developed blastocoel, which every embryonic cell surrounds and touches. Every cell is in contact with the proteinaceous fluid of the blastocoel on the inside and touches the hyaline layer on the outside. The loosely connected blastomeres are now tightly connected because of tight junctions that create a seamless epithelium that completely encircles the blastocoel. Even as the blastomeres continue to divide, the blastula remains one-cell thick and thins out as the embryo expands outward. This is accomplished in part due to the influx of water that expands the blastocoel and pushes the cells surrounding it outwards. At this point, the cells have become specified and are ciliated on the opposite side of the blastocoel. The vegetal plate and animal hemisphere develop and secrete a hatching enzyme that digests the fertilization envelope and allows the embryo to now become a free-swimming hatched blastula.

Development of primary mesenchyme

Important to the sea urchin blastula is the ingression of the primary mesenchyme. After the blastula hatches from the fertilization envelope, the vegetal side of the blastula begins to flatten and thicken as a small cluster of these cells develop long, thin processes called filopodia. These cells then dissociate and ingress into the blastocoel and are called the primary mesenchyme. The cells move randomly along the inside of the blastocoel, until they become localized in the ventrolateral region of the blastocoel.

In birds

Similar to mammals, fertilization of the avian ovum occurs in the oviduct. From there the blastodisc, a small cluster of cells in the animal pole of the egg, then undergoes discoidal meroblastic cleavage. The blastoderm develops into the epiblast and hypoblast and it is between these layers that the blastocoel will form. The shape and formation of the avian blastodisc differs from amphibian, fish, and echinoderm blastulas, but the overall spatial relationship of the blastocoel remains the same.[page needed]

Formation of primitive streak

The avian blastocoel is important during the development of the primitive streak. The ingression of the endodermal precursor cells form the epiblast into the blastocoel and the migration of lateral cells of the posterior epiblast towards the center form the early primitive streak. As these cells converge inward, a depression forms called the primitive groove and functions as an opening through which cells travel into the blastocoel. As cells migrate into the blastocoel, they undergo an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transformation.[page needed]

Zebrafish: a special case

Unlike amphibian, echinoderm, mammalian, and avian embryos, zebrafish do not have a defined blastocoel. Rather, they have small, irregular extracellular spaces that are formed between the cells of the blastodisc sitting atop the yolk.

References

Further reading

Tags:

Blastocoel In mammalsBlastocoel In amphibiansBlastocoel In sea urchinsBlastocoel In birdsBlastocoel Zebrafish: a special caseBlastocoel Further readingBlastocoelBlastocystBlastulaEmbryonic developmentHelp:IPA/EnglishInner cell massTrophectoderm

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Inna Lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'unJake GyllenhaalBabe RuthDeepak ParambolCrew (film)Ku Klux KlanMurder trial of O. J. SimpsonPost MaloneAnzac Day matchDogGeorge IIIDonald SterlingRobin WilliamsTwitch (service)HozierList of prime ministers of IndiaYouTube TVThe Zone of Interest (film)Cody RhodesLinkedInZionismNarendra ModiAnya Taylor-JoyQueen VictoriaShōgun (2024 miniseries)Harry PotterRyan ReynoldsAnsel AdamsRise of the Planet of the ApesThe Talented Mr. Ripley (film)Jimmy Butler2017 NFL draftKylie JennerThe Gentlemen (2019 film)Drake MayeSean CombsJustin BieberMoisés AriasBharatiya Janata PartyThe SupremesWish (film)William Shakespeare2024 Premier League DartsLiverpool F.C.Daman, IndiaToomaj SalehiList of states and territories of the United StatesLouis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of BurmaFC BarcelonaGAZ SobolBillboard Hot 100Bruce WillisKaren McDougalMuhammad AliNancy Wilson (rock musician)Alexander the GreatAmber HeardArsenal F.C.New ZealandDonald TrumpAmanda BynesThe Office (American TV series)Alia BhattMin Hee-jinXXX (film series)2018 NFL draftNicolas CageHiroyuki SanadaLovely RunnerNo Way Up20242024 Croatian parliamentary electionMyanmar🡆 More