4.4 Article

Human gastrulation: The embryo and its models

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 474, Issue -, Pages 100-108

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2021.01.006

Keywords

Human gastrulation; Embryology; Stem cell models

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council (MRC) [MR/R017190/1]
  2. Gates Cambridge Scholarship
  3. MRC [MR/R017190/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Technical and ethical limitations restrict the study of early human development, leading to a reliance on historical anatomical and histological studies on human embryos. Research on human embryos is limited to the 14-day rule, leading to extrapolation from animal models to understand human development. However, significant differences between human and animal embryos highlight the necessity of studying human embryos directly for a comprehensive understanding of human development.
Technical and ethical limitations create a challenge to study early human development, especially following the first 3 weeks of development after fertilization, when the fundamental aspects of the body plan are established through the process called gastrulation. As a consequence, our current understanding of human development is mostly based on the anatomical and histological studies on Carnegie Collection of human embryos, which were carried out more than half a century ago. Due to the 14-day rule on human embryo research, there have been no experimental studies beyond the fourteenth day of human development. Mutagenesis studies on animal models, mostly in mouse, are often extrapolated to human embryos to understand the transcriptional regulation of human development. However, due to the existence of significant differences in their morphological and molecular features as well as the time scale of their development, it is obvious that complete knowledge of human development can be achieved only by studying the human embryo. These studies require a cellular framework. Here we summarize the cellular, molecular, and temporal aspects associated with human gastrulation and discuss how they relate to existing human PSCs based models of early development.

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