MCD BIO 138 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Blastomere, Multicellular Organism, Cell Potency

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Development is the process by which a single cell (the fertilized egg) containing a single nucleus undergoes cleavage and growth, giving rise to a multicellular organism consisting of many different cell types (carrying out different functions). The most important concept that we begin with in this course is that development is controlled by genes. Although this seems obvious to everyone now, this was not always the case. Some thought that a tiny, preformed organism was present in the egg or sperm and simply grew during embryogenesis. We now know that embryogenesis is a process of generating increasing complexity (this process is called epigenesis) by the action of different genes in different cells. As we discuss below, this process depends on the fact that, although all cells in the organism have the same genetic information, different cells express different genes at different times. Blastomere isolation and nuclear transplantation experiments demonstrate the principle of genomic equivalence.

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