- Also called:
- antenatal development
- Key People:
- Bernard Siegfried Albinus
- Related Topics:
- gestation
- embryo
- fetus
- precocial young
- altricial state
A cleft separates the outermost cells of the inner cell mass of the blastocyst from the remainder, which then becomes the embryonic disk. The split-off, thin upper layer is the amnion, which remains attached to the periphery of the embryonic disk. As the disk folds into a cylindrical embryo, the amniotic margin follows the underfolding, and its line of union becomes limited to the ventral (frontward) body wall, where the umbilical cord attaches. The amnion becomes a tough, transparent, nonvascular membrane that gradually fills the chorionic sac and then fuses with it. At the end of the third month of pregnancy, the nonplacental extent of this nearly exposed double membrane comes into contact with the lining of the uterus elsewhere. Fusion then obliterates the uterine cavity, which has been undergoing progressive reduction in size. For the remainder of pregnancy, the only cavity within the uterus is that of the fluid-filled amniotic sac.
Clear watery fluid fills the amniotic sac. The embryo is suspended in this fluid and thus can maintain its shape and mold its body form without hindrance. Throughout pregnancy the amniotic sac serves as a water cushion, absorbing jolts, equalizing pressures, and permitting the fetus to change posture. At childbirth it acts as a fluid wedge that helps dilate the neck of the uterus. When the sac ruptures, about a quart of fluid escapes as the “waters.” If the sac does not rupture or if it covers the head at birth, it is known as a caul.
Allantois
The allantois, a tube of endoderm (the innermost germ layer), grows out of the early yolk sac in a region that soon becomes the hindgut. The tube extends into a bridge of mesoderm (the middle germ layer) that connects embryo with chorion and will become incorporated into the umbilical cord. The human allantoic tube is tiny and never becomes a large sac with important functions, as it does in many other mammals and in reptiles and birds. In the second month it ceases to grow, and it soon is obliterated. Blood vessels, however, develop early in its mesodermal sheath, and these spread into the chorion and vascularize it. Throughout pregnancy they will keep the embryo in close relationship with the mother’s uterine circulation.
Umbilical cord
As the ventral body wall closes in, the yolk stalk and allantois are brought together, along with their mesodermal sheaths and blood vessels. Enclosing everything is a wrapping of amnion. In this manner a cylindrical structure, the umbilical cord, comes to connect the embryo with the placenta. It will serve the embryo and fetus as a physiological lifeline throughout the pregnancy. The mature cord is about 1.3 cm (0.5 inch) in diameter, and it attains an average length of nearly 50 cm (1.6 feet).
Formation of the three primary germ layers
The inner cell mass, attached to the deep pole of the implanted blastocyst, is sometimes called the embryoblast, since it contains the cells that will form an embryo. The cellular mass enters into the process of gastrulation, through which the three primary germ layers segregate. Then the gastrula stage, the next advance after the blastula, begins to take form. First, cells facing the cavity of the blastocyst arrange into a layer known as the hypoblast. The thick residual layer, temporarily designated as epiblast, is the source of a definitive uppermost sheet, the ectoderm, and an intermediate layer, the mesoderm. In this second phase of gastrulation, some cells of the epiblast migrate to the midline position, then turn downward and emerge beneath as mesoderm. Such cells continue to spread laterally, right and left, between the endoderm and the residue of epiblast, which is now definitive ectoderm.
The site where the migratory mesodermal cells leave the epiblast is an elongated, crowded seam known as the primitive streak. Similar migrating cells produce a thick knob at one end of the primitive streak. Their continued forward movement from this so-called primitive knot produces a dense band that becomes the rodlike notochord.
The germ layers are not segregated sheets whose cells have predetermined, limited capacities and inflexibly fixed fates in carrying out organ-building activities. Rather, the layers represent advantageously located assembly grounds out of which the component parts of the embryo emerge normally, according to a master constructional plan that assigns different parts to definite spatial positions and local sites. Thus, although the germ layers have developmental potencies in excess of their normal developmental fates, their ordinary participation in organ forming does not deviate from a definite, standard program. Only the principal functional tissue is designated in the name of each primary germ layer. In a few instances, such as the suprarenal (adrenal) glands and the teeth, a compound organ has important parts of different origin.
The derivatives of the primary germ layers are presented in the table.
Ectoderm | |
---|---|
epidermis | |
cutaneous derivatives | |
epithelium of: | mouth; oral glands |
nasal passages | |
sense passages | |
central nervous system | |
peripheral nervous system | |
hypophysis; suprarenal medulla | |
Mesoderm | |
epithelium of: | circulatory system |
spleen; lymph nodes | |
urogenital system | |
body cavities | |
connective tissues; blood; bone marrow | |
muscular tissues | |
skeletal tissues | |
suprarenal cortex | |
Endoderm | |
epithelium of: | pharynx |
thyroid; thymus | |
parathyroid | |
digestive tube; liver; pancreas | |
larynx; trachea; lungs | |
urinary bladder; urethra | |
vestibule; vagina |