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Your destiny, from day one { Embryos differentiate early, aren't blobs}
Nature ^ | 8 July 2002 | Helen Pearson

Posted on 08/04/2002 8:08:53 PM PDT by syriacus

Our body plan is being defined in the first few hours of life.

Your world was shaped in the first 24 hours after conception. Where your head and feet would sprout, and which side would form your back and which your belly, were being defined in the minutes and hours after sperm and egg united.

Just five years ago, this statement would have been heresy. Mammalian embryos were thought to spend their first few days as a featureless orb of cells. Only later, at about the time of implantation into the wall of the uterus, were cells thought to acquire distinct 'fates' determining their positions in the future body.

But by tagging specific points on mammalian eggs shortly after fertilization, researchers have now shown that they come to lie at predictable points in the embryo. Rather than being a naive sphere, it seems that a newly fertilized egg has a defined top-bottom axis that sets up the equivalent axis in the future embryo. Controversially, one group even claims that the spot on the egg at which the sperm enters determines where the first cell division occurs - and that the resulting two cells already have a bias towards different fates.

There is a memory of the first cleavage in our life

This new understanding opens fresh avenues of study for developmental biologists. But it also raises the possibility that any technique that meddles with early human development - such as the removal of cells from an early embryo for pre-implantation genetic testing - might potentially be harmful. "It's possible you could be removing a cell with a predictable fate and causing damage," says Alan Handyside, who studies embryo abnormalities at the University of Leeds, UK.

Biologists have long known that the eventual axes of the embryo in most species are laid down either before fertilization, or in the first hours afterwards. In fruit flies, for instance, the egg inherits a molecule that is more concentrated at one end of the egg than the other, and thus defines the head-tail axis.

Heads or tails?

But mammalian embryos were considered to be a special case. First, they have a striking ability to compensate for damage. Split up the first two cells of a mouse embryo and both recover to make two apparently normal mice. Second, only around 15% of cells in the blastocyst - a hollow sphere of cells that forms some five days after conception - contribute towards the body proper, rather than supporting tissues such as the placenta. These cells reside in a structure called the inner cell mass (ICM). Finally, the first visible sign of a distinguishable head or tail takes 6.5 days to appear in mouse embryos. "All that argued against the idea of there being a map on the egg," says developmental biologist John Gurdon of the Wellcome/Cancer Research UK Institute of Cancer and Developmental Biology in Cambridge.

The first hint that the blastocyst was not the unassuming orb it appeared came in the 1980s. Two little-noticed studies from Jean Smith of Queen's College in Flushing, New York, showed that the mouse blastocyst, rather than a being a symmetrical sphere, is slightly distorted and has recognizable axes1, 2. What's more, these axes appeared to match up with those of the fetus, suggesting that the former sets up the latter.

The findings prompted Richard Gardner, an embryologist at the University of Oxford, UK, to repeat the work, drawing similar conclusions3 .But it took another five years before Gardner could make anyone listen. "People were quite hostile," he recalls.

Gardner suspected that the axes present in the blastocyst were there from the moment of conception. But to show that a specific point on the fertilized egg consistently maps to a particular position on the embryo, he needed a way of tagging the egg without disturbing it. He found such a marker in the form of the second polar body, a 'spare' set of chromosomes thrown out of the egg when the sperm enters: it remains glued to the embryo's surface in a set position.

Impossible to ignore

Examining blastocysts, Gardner found that the polar body consistently perched on a line of latitude dividing the upper hemisphere, containing the ICM, from the lower hemisphere4. This suggested that the top and bottom of the egg line up with, and may determine, the left and right sides of the blastocyst. He backed up this idea by using oil drops placed in the jelly-like protein coat of two-cell embryos to trace cell axes more accurately5. "People could no longer ignore that there was patterning information in the egg," says Gardner.

Meanwhile, Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz's team at the Wellcome/Cancer Research UK Institute had found that this pattern is retained by the embryo after implantation. The researchers took unimplanted blastocysts and labelled cells at one or other pole of each with a fluorescent protein before transferring them into female mice and allowing them to implant. After 6.5 days, these cells ended up towards either one end or the other of the embryo6.

But how does the initial pattern get there? Zernicka-Goetz suspected the act of fertilization itself was the key, and injected sticky fluorescent beads under the coat of mouse eggs at the spot where sperm had penetrated. In most cases, the bead's position roughly coincided with the equator of the first cell division, implying that the sperm's entry point determines where the cell first divides7.

In subsequent experiments, Zernicka-Goetz painted the first two cells, one red, one blue, using dyes dissolved in olive oil. She then tracked their descendants into the blastocyst. One cell usually gave rise to the region containing the ICM, the other to the region largely destined to make the placenta and other supporting tissues8.

Zernicka-Goetz's conclusion is that the first division of the egg influences the fate of each cell and ultimately, all the tissues of the body. "There is a memory of the first cleavage in our life," says Zernicka-Goetz.

Gardner disputes the idea that the sperm entry point is critical, arguing that Zernicka-Goetz's fluorescent beads are drifting away from the point of fertilization. In recent work, he used components of the sperm's discarded tail to mark its entry position into the egg, and found no association with the equator of the first cell division9. Zernicka-Goetz has countered with a third way of marking the entry site using fluorescently labelled sperm that transfer their label to the egg - and re-asserted her original conclusion10. She is now working on eggs triggered into developing without sperm. If the first cell division in these embryos produces cells that contribute more equally to each half of the blastocyst, it will boost her theory that the point of sperm entry is the key factor.

Patterns pending

Developmental biologists are now keen to work out the molecular mechanisms underlying the patterning information in early mammalian embryos. As in fruit flies, they may contain an asymmetrically distributed 'determinant', a molecule that influences cell fate and is inherited unequally in the first cell division. Jonathan Van Blerkom of the University of Colorado at Boulder has intriguing evidence that two proteins are distributed in this way in human and mouse eggs11. He does not believe that these molecules are the determinants, but rather that their distribution is determined by the action of a yet-to-be-discovered mechanism.

It's possible you could be removing a cell with a predictable fate and causing damage

Other researchers suspect that the sperm's entry on one side triggers a complete re-organization of the egg's internal skeleton that then makes cells at different positions in the embryo divide at slightly different times.

Another mystery is how early mammalian embryos retain the ability to develop normally if damaged or split in two, given the existence of patterning information that appears to narrow down cell fate. Most researchers think that the patterning information is quite weak, so that cells become biased towards producing certain tissues, rather than irrevocably committed. Only later are the biases stabilized and cell fates fixed.

Nevertheless, the existence of patterning information in the early human embryo raises the issue of whether certain assisted-reproduction techniques could disrupt the delicate processes of establishing body axes.

Sperm entry may be an important factor.

If sperm entry point is an important factor, for instance, that throws up questions about intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection, in which sperm from infertile men are injected directly into the egg. Pre-implantation genetic testing, in which two cells are removed from an eight-cell embryo to test for inherited diseases such as cystic fibrosis, is another area of concern. "Perhaps we should pay attention to which cells we remove," says Handyside. But other experts believe that the flexibility of human embryos is sufficient to compensate for these manipulations. Damaged embryos may, in any case, spontaneously abort.

What is clear is that developmental biologists will no longer dismiss early mammalian embryos as featureless bundles of cells - and that leaves them with some work to do. "I believe in the new philosophy," says Tom Fleming, a developmental biologist at the University of Southampton, UK, "but there's a lot of detail yet to be understood."

 

References

1. Smith, L. J. J. Embryological Experimental Morphology, 55, 257 - 277, (1980).
2. Smith, L. J. J. Embryol. Exp. Morph, 89, 15 - 35, (1985).
3. Gardner, R. L., Meredith, M. R. & Altman, D. G. Journal of Experimental Zoology, 264, 437 - 443, (2002).
4. Gardner, R. L. Development, 124, 289 - 301, (1997).
5. Gardner, R. L. Development, 128, 839 - 847, (2001).
6. Weber, R. J. et al.Development, 126, 5591 - 5598, (1999).
7. Piotrowska, K. & Zernicka-Goetz, M. Nature, 409, 517 - 521, (2001).
8. Piotrowska, K. et al. Development, 128, 3739 - 3748, (2001).
9. Davies, T. J. & Gardner, R. L. Human Reproduction, (in the press).
10. Plusa, P., Piotrowska, K. & Zernicka-Goetz, M. Genesis, 32, 193 - 198, (2002).
11. Antcsak, M. & Van Blerkom, J. Molecular Human Reproduction, 3, 1067 - 1086, (1997).

© Nature News Service / Macmillan Magazines Ltd 2002 


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: blobhood; differentiation; embryology; flatearth; heresy; personhood; reality
Will pro-aborts accept this new finding or will disciples of NARAL's Myth of Undifferentiated Blobhood prove that they really are viable candidates for the Flat Earth Society?
1 posted on 08/04/2002 8:08:53 PM PDT by syriacus
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To: syriacus
Mammalian embryos were thought to spend their first few days as a featureless orb of cells...at the moment of conception the embryo receives the genetic makeup of a unique human being - doesn't matter what it looks like for the first few days - if nurtured and protected it will grow into a fetus, a day old baby, a three year old infant etc etc...makes no more sense to say the fertilized egg can be killed because it doesn't yet look or function like a week old infant than it would to say you can kill the infant because it doesn't yet look or function like a thirty year old adult - but then, pro-aborts have no sense.....
2 posted on 08/04/2002 8:42:11 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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To: Intolerant in NJ
but then, pro-aborts have no sense.....

You've summed up their emptyheadedness nicely.

They argue like pre-teens.

It's ironic that they don't realize that introducing their favorite non sequiturs into the abortion discussion makes them seem even more immature (or deluded).

3 posted on 08/05/2002 9:26:05 AM PDT by syriacus
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To: syriacus
"aren't blobs"

A recent study suggests that we don't become "blobs" until age 35, or the tenth year of marriage, wich ever comes first.

(this study was conducted by Mrs. WhiteGuy)

4 posted on 08/05/2002 9:35:35 AM PDT by WhiteGuy
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To: syriacus
It's possible you could be removing a cell with a predictable fate and causing damage

Then genetic twins are inferior compared to the individual who would have been produced had the division not occurred.

5 posted on 08/05/2002 10:02:20 AM PDT by mindprism.com
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To: mindprism.com
Um, no. Maybe there are certain eggs that are predisposed to split. Not the same as removing a cell. I like the 'patterning' argument re: eggs. This might explain a lot about twinning. Wonder how one would select for this type of egg being produced. This type of twinning is at a fairly constant rate across all races over the earth. Fraternal twinning (two eggs, each being fertilized and implanted during one cycle) differs widely across the planet. Japan has the *lowest* rate of this (interestingly enough, japanese eat a lot of soy, which has phytoestrogens in it which may hinder ovulation, at least the multiple kind). Nigeria has the highest rate (several *hundred* times the rate of Japan. Nigerian women eat a lot of yams, yams have a progesterone mimic in them which fools the body into thinking ovulation hasn't occurred yet so it tries again. /ramble...
6 posted on 08/05/2002 10:09:25 AM PDT by Black Agnes
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To: Intolerant in NJ
makes no more sense to say the fertilized egg can be killed because it doesn't yet look or function like a week old infant than it would to say you can kill the infant because it doesn't yet look or function like a thirty year old adult

Every adult, left in its normal environment, supplied with its every need, will eventually, naturally and inevitably become a corpse. Does that 'potential eventuality' make an adult a corpse -- for a fertilized egg is claimed to be a 'legal person' based on its potentiality.

Try this mental experiment:

If a fertilized cell splits in two, and the two cells are manually seperated, we now have two 'potentialities', two 'legal persons' by pro-life definition...

Accepting the above, if then, those two cells are nudged back together, logic dictates a death of a legal person.

In cell 'A' nothing has changed, in cell 'B' nothing has changed. Cell 'B' is the same 'over here' as it was 'over there'.

The only thing changed is its environment.

Now, suppose we had squashed cell 'B' instead of nudging it back -- how would that be different than squashing it without moving it?

Given that each cell in this two-celled cluster has individual potential, would we be morally compelled to seperate them (given that we can at that moment)?

Using the 'problems with potential' illustrated above, and how this potential has been demonstrated to depend on environment, I am personally obliged to seek the next significant event when defining 'legal person', one that is sufficient enough to overcome the 'bodily sovereignty' argument of the woman:

1) If a foreign country drafts its citizens into to fight in an internal civil war, would the world community be morally justified in waging war on that country?

2) If a foreign country allowed abortion, would the world community be morally justified in declaring war on that country?

If a fertilized egg is a legal person, then abortion is murder one. If you do not support penalties that equate abortion to murder one, you are not upholding equal protection under law.

Every millimeter you slip from that equal protection is indicative of your lack of self-assurance of the reality in this matter. Unless your concious is at ease with equal punishment for a woman who aborts and a murderer you have lost your claim at absolutism and must admit that the embryo is 'something less'

If you examine the mappings of (1) and (2) onto the abortion question and practice, you must ask yourself this: If we are not willing, ultimately, to wage war against a country allowing the 'genocide' of abortion, then why wage that war on your own fellow citizen, the woman?

In summary, I place 'legal personhood' at the next significant event: The very first flicker of 'atomistic conciousness' -- the first meta-neural activity: nerve activity that is non-inherent (a heart muscle has inherent neural impulses).

This ill-worded moment, I believe would occur at roughly 4-5 weeks. After that, my conciousness is at ease with murder one punishment for abortion.

7 posted on 08/05/2002 11:01:56 AM PDT by mindprism.com
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To: Black Agnes
Maybe there are certain eggs that are predisposed to split. Not the same as removing a cell.

Well, obviously some are, but that does not imply a negation of my supposition.

See #7 for my 'position paper'.

8 posted on 08/05/2002 11:06:12 AM PDT by mindprism.com
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To: mindprism.com
Manually splitting the embryo doesn't make two persons, in all likelihood you will kill the embryo. We do not know the chemical process/genetic process necessary to produce identical twinning just yet. Best leave the embryo alone until we do...
9 posted on 08/05/2002 11:09:45 AM PDT by Black Agnes
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To: Black Agnes
Manually splitting the embryo doesn't make two persons, in all likelihood you will kill the embryo.

Whether you succeed has nothing to do with the realities behind the success, and by extension, the validity of my thought experiment.

After the embryo grows into eight cells, researchers split it into four identical embryos, each consisting of just two cells.

10 posted on 08/05/2002 11:45:26 AM PDT by mindprism.com
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To: mindprism.com
Well, at least we've got murder one moved back to "roughly 4-5 weeks" (or maybe we could go for manslaughter or justifiable homicide) - it's a good start........
11 posted on 08/05/2002 8:41:48 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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