Image of the Week

Brains and Brawn Packed Like Peas in a Pod

  • Published1 Aug 2019
  • Author
  • Source BrainFacts/SfN
neural tube
Prof. R. Bellairs CC BY

Building a body with muscles, brains, and bones is tough. That’s why nature likes blueprints with repeating parts. Centipedes are an extreme example of this shortcut, but all animals — including humans — feature at least some repetition.

If you could unroll an embryo, you’d get a layered lasagna of cell types. Most of the top layer goes on to become skin, but one part folds down and rolls into a long cylinder, as seen here on the right in a developing chicken. This “neural tube” grows to become your spinal cord and brain.

Around the same time, three weeks after conception in humans, parts of the middle layer start to pinch off into two flanking columns of balls called somites (this chick has 55 pairs while most humans have 44), seen here on the left. Each pair eventually breaks into parts, one part surrounding a section of the neural tube as vertebrae, others forming stomach muscles and back muscles. All duos develop the same way — nature’s version of copy and paste — establishing the repeating patterns seen in slices of your torso.

CONTENT PROVIDED BY

BrainFacts/SfN

Gilbert SF. Developmental Biology. 6th edition. Sunderland (MA): Sinauer Associates; 2000. Formation of the Neural Tube. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK10080/

Gilbert SF. Developmental Biology. 6th edition. Sunderland (MA): Sinauer Associates; 2000. Paraxial Mesoderm: The Somites and Their Derivatives. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK10085/

Hill, M.A. (2019, June 11) Embryology Somitogenesis. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Somitogenesis

Image of the Week

Check out the Image of the Week Archive.

Explore

Research & Discoveries

See how discoveries in the lab have improved human health.

Read More

Ask An Expert

Ask a neuroscientist your questions about the brain.

Submit a Question