399
CHAPTER 20
Genes and Development
400
Altogether, the human body contains about 200 different types of cell, all of which derive from a single cell, the zygote. Some cells derived from the zygote become muscle cells, others nerve cells, still others connective tissue. Almost all of these cells have exactly the same genome: They differ not in their content of genes, but instead in the groups of genes that are expressed or repressed. In other words, these cell types differ as a result of gene regulation, discussed in the previous chapter.
Gene regulation is especially important in multicellular organisms because it underlies development, the process in which a fertilized egg undergoes multiple rounds of cell division to become an embryo with specialized tissues and organs. During development, cells undergo changes in gene expression as genes are turned on and off at specific times and places. Gene regulation causes cells to become progressively more specialized, a process known as differentiation.
In this chapter, we focus on the general principles by which genes control development. We will see that, as cells differentiate along one pathway, they progressively lose their ability to differentiate along other pathways. Yet gene expression can sometimes be reprogrammed to reopen pathways of differentiation that had previously been shut off, a process that has important implications for therapeutic replacement of diseased or damaged tissue. From a broader perspective, the study of evolutionary changes in developmental processes constitute the field of evolutionary developmental biology, often called evo-