Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.

As the embryonic structure, the cardiac conduction system must continue to develop in a coordinated manner at all embryonic stages. This requires not only the formation of distinct components of the conduction system, but the integration of these components into a functioning whole. The development...

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Main Authors: Tverdokhleb I.V., Silkina Ju.V.
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Ministry of Health of Ukraine. Dnipropetrovsk Medical Academy 2007-01-01
Series:Морфологія
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.morphology.dp.ua/_pub/MORPHO-2007-01-03/07tivssh.pdf
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spelling doaj-78511f6f3ddb47bf8a36a16d00a66a2f2020-11-24T20:54:41ZrusMinistry of Health of Ukraine. Dnipropetrovsk Medical Academy Морфологія1997-96652007-01-01135711Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.Tverdokhleb I.V.Silkina Ju.V.As the embryonic structure, the cardiac conduction system must continue to develop in a coordinated manner at all embryonic stages. This requires not only the formation of distinct components of the conduction system, but the integration of these components into a functioning whole. The development of the chambered heart and a conduction system requires the proper arrangement of a number of embryonic building blocks, comprising inflow tract, atria, atrioventricular canal, compact and trabecular ventricular myocardium, and outflow tract. In the mammalian heart, the sinoatrial and atrioventricular nodes will aggregate in the slow-conducting inflow tract and atrioventricular canal. The ventricular conduction system may develop in its entirety from the trabecular ventricular myocardium, the remodeling of which results in a gradual transition toward the compact myocardium. So the development of the conduction system does not require the invention of new building components but a remodeling of existing components. Many details in the fashioning of the embryonic blocks of the heart into the conduction system of the formed heart still need to be worked out. The factors that specify the cardiac building blocks and regulate their coordinated morphogenesis have remained largely unknown. Their identification will benefit from combined molecular, genetic, and morphological approaches. http://www.morphology.dp.ua/_pub/MORPHO-2007-01-03/07tivssh.pdfheartconduction systemvertebrateorigin and embryogenesis
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tverdokhleb I.V.
Silkina Ju.V.
spellingShingle Tverdokhleb I.V.
Silkina Ju.V.
Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.
Морфологія
heart
conduction system
vertebrate
origin and embryogenesis
author_facet Tverdokhleb I.V.
Silkina Ju.V.
author_sort Tverdokhleb I.V.
title Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.
title_short Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.
title_full Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.
title_fullStr Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.
title_full_unstemmed Origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.
title_sort origin and the embryonic transformations of vertebrate heart conducting system.
publisher Ministry of Health of Ukraine. Dnipropetrovsk Medical Academy
series Морфологія
issn 1997-9665
publishDate 2007-01-01
description As the embryonic structure, the cardiac conduction system must continue to develop in a coordinated manner at all embryonic stages. This requires not only the formation of distinct components of the conduction system, but the integration of these components into a functioning whole. The development of the chambered heart and a conduction system requires the proper arrangement of a number of embryonic building blocks, comprising inflow tract, atria, atrioventricular canal, compact and trabecular ventricular myocardium, and outflow tract. In the mammalian heart, the sinoatrial and atrioventricular nodes will aggregate in the slow-conducting inflow tract and atrioventricular canal. The ventricular conduction system may develop in its entirety from the trabecular ventricular myocardium, the remodeling of which results in a gradual transition toward the compact myocardium. So the development of the conduction system does not require the invention of new building components but a remodeling of existing components. Many details in the fashioning of the embryonic blocks of the heart into the conduction system of the formed heart still need to be worked out. The factors that specify the cardiac building blocks and regulate their coordinated morphogenesis have remained largely unknown. Their identification will benefit from combined molecular, genetic, and morphological approaches.
topic heart
conduction system
vertebrate
origin and embryogenesis
url http://www.morphology.dp.ua/_pub/MORPHO-2007-01-03/07tivssh.pdf
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