The "morphogenetic repertoire" of cells in the gastrula includes the three additional movements shown on the right. Of these, the specialized form of intercalation known as convergent extension is the most important morphogenetic movement involved in the construction of the primary body axis in amphibians. As we will see, convergent extension is a key event both during gastrulation, when convergent extension of the marginal zone occurs to create the incipient anterior-posterior axis, and during neurulation, when convergent extension of the central region of the neural plate, or notoplate, occurs as the neuraxis elongates and the neural tube closes.
Click on a cell movement below to get a fuller description of what is going on.
During epiboly, a sheet of cells spreads by thinning. i.e., the sheet
thins, while its overall surface area increases in the other two directions.
Epiboly can involve a monolayer (i.e. a sheet of cells one cell layer thick),
in which case the individual cells must undergo a change in shape. In other
cases, however, a sheet that has several cell layer can thin by changes
in position of its cells. In this case, epiboly occurs via intercalation,
one of the other movements described on this page.
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During intercalation, two or more rows of cells move between one another,
creating an array of cells that is longer (in one or more dimensions) but
thinner. The overall change in shape of the tissue results from cell rearrangement.
Intercalation can be a powerful means of expanding a tissue sheet. A specialized
form of intercalation is convergent extension, which is described on this
page.
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During convergent extension, two or more rows of cells intercalate, but
the intercalation is highly directional. Cells converge by intercalating
perpendicular to the axis of extension, resulting in the overall extension
of the tissue in a preferred direction. If we had a way to label cells from
rows on either side of the axis of extension, they would be found to mix
with one another as a result of these oriented intercalation events.
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