48 Hour Chick Embryo Serial Cross Section

Another Way To Look at Serially Sectioned Frog and Chick Embryos

48 Hour Chick Embryo Serial Cross Section Picture

What we show here is the first part of a project we call '4-D Embryology--Embryos in Three Dimensions and Their Changes Over Time.' We captured digital images of all the sections of serially sectioned embryos. We then used the sequence of images of an embryo to make a QuickTime digital movie. After we made movies of several serially sectioned frog and chick embryos, we started using them in our developmental biology labs. Students like watching and using these QuickTime movies to learn about developing embryos, and we want to share these movies with other students of developmental biology. What you can see here are small 'postage-stamp' versions of these movies of serially sectioned frog and chick embryos. All show sequential cross sections going anterior-to-posterior (head-to-tail).

48-hour Chick Embryo-Sections 2-28. Click on the small images to see a larger version of the image. Small images with purple numbers link to large imageswith labels.Small images with black numbers link to large images without labels. Label the Chick Embryo (72 hours) Label the cross section of a newly-laid chicken egg. Allantois - a large sack that holds some of the embryo's waste. It is located near the far end (the posterior) of the embryo, close to the leg buds. Brain - the developing brain takes up much of the head area (at the anterior) of the embryo.

Get Quicktime
  • What you can see here are small 'postage-stamp' versions of these movies of serially sectioned frog and chick embryos. All show sequential cross sections going anterior-to-posterior (head-to-tail). Get Quicktime Serially Sectioned Frog Embryo Movies 4 mm 5 mm 7 mm 10 mm Serially Sectioned Chick Embryo Movies 24 hr 33 hr 33 hr 48 hr 48 hr 56 hr.
  • Carnegie Stage 13. About Stage 13 Embryo Sections - This image is from a serial section of a 6mm CRL pig embryo with some features of the Stage 14 embryo. This embryo is approximately equal to the day 42 human embryo. Use these serial images to identify internal features and relationships that exist within the embryo at this stage.
  • Of 48 Hours Chick Embryo of 26-28 Pairs of Somites: 1. Of 48 hours chick embryo. At this stage the area opaca and area pellucida are not visible. The extra embryonic area has grown in size. Primitive streak has disappeared. The mesoderm, in front of Hensen’s node, has given rise to 26-28 pairs of somites.
Serially Sectioned Frog Embryo Movies
4 mm 5 mm
7 mm 10 mm
Serially Sectioned Chick Embryo Movies
24 hr 33 hr 33 hr
48 hr 48 hr 56 hr
If you want to use these movies in your classes, you can download the full-size QuickTime movies of these embryos. To download these movies, you need to be a member of the SDB. If you're not a member, join the SDB--it really doesn't cost that much to join and it's a great organization to belong to. Anyway, e-mail me, Laurie Iten (laurie_iten@sdb.bio.purdue.edu), if you want to know how and where to download these movies.

72 Hour Chick Embryo

Why We Look At Serial Sections of Embryos

When we study embryology, we need to visualize the changes that occur in developing embryos. Direct observation is the ideal method for visualizing developing embryos. Everyone enjoys watching living embryos develop or watching time-lapse movies of developing embryos. Some embryos remain transparent throughout their development and we can see what's going on inside and outside at the same time. Most embryos are not transparent; once they become more than a few cell layers thick, we only see what's happening on the outside.

To see what's going on inside, we typically cannot dissect an embryo because it's too small. We have to look at serial sections of embryos. Serial sections are where we slice an embryo as if it was a sausage. We affix each section, in order, on a microscope slide and stain the sections before we look at them with the microscope. We then 'read' these two-dimensional sections to try to visualize the three-dimensional organization of all the layers and parts of an embryo at one stage of development.

The above three figures are modified versions of Fig. A, p.3 of Schoenwolf, G.C. 1995, Laboratory Studies of Vertebrate and Invertebrate Embryos. Guide and Atlas of Descriptive and Experimental Development. 7th Edition, Prentice Hall, New Jersey.

How We Make the Movies

To capture images of sections to make into movies, we use a compound microscope with a video camera attached to a computer (Macintosh) with a video board.
Within an image editing application (Photoshop), we capture an image of each section of a serially sectioned embryo.We also use Photoshop to align images before we make the movies.
To make the movie, we used the QuickTime 'Convert to Movie' application.

What Else Is Being Done in the '4-D Embryology' Project

'Flying' through a QuickTime movie of a serially sectioned embryo gives us a hint of the three-dimensional (3-D) spatial arrangement of embryonic structures. Now we are taking the 2-D images we used to make the movies to reconstruct an embryo into its natural three dimensions. What you see below are some 'slices' through a reconstructed 7 mm frog embryo.

When we have embryos reconstructed at consecutive stages of development, we'll be able to look at the spatial arrangement of the cells, tissues, and organs as they appear over time--the fourth dimension of embryology.

96 Hour Chick Embryo

Embryo

48 Hour Chick Embryo Serial Cross Section Pictures

Contributed by Laurie Iten
Purdue University
3/9/96