Examples of somite in the following topics:
-
Somite Development
- Somites develop from the paraxial mesoderm and participate in the facilitation of multiple developmental processes.
- In the developing vertebrate embryo, somites are masses of mesoderm that can be found distributed along the two sides of the neural tube.
- The dermatome is the dorsal portion of the paraxial mesoderm somite.
- The myotome is that part of a somite that forms the muscles.
- The repetitive somites are marked with the older term primitive segments.
-
Gene Expression for Spatial Positioning
- A spatial pattern of gene expression reorganizes the mesoderm into groups of cells called somites with spaces between them.
- The somites will further develop into the ribs, lungs, and segmental (spine) muscle.
- In this five-week old human embryo, somites are segments along the length of the body.
-
Gastrulation
- The mesoderm is found between the ectoderm and the endoderm, giving rise to somites.
- The somites form muscle, the cartilage of the ribs and vertebrae, the dermis, the notochord, blood and blood vessels, bone, and connective tissue.
-
Organogenesis
- A spatial pattern of gene expression reorganizes the mesoderm into groups of cells called somites, with spaces between them.
- The somites will further develop into the ribs, lungs, and segmental (spine) muscle.
-
Establishing Body Axes during Development
- In mammals, secondary neurulation begins around the 35th somite.