blood island

blood islands

Blood islands are structures in the developing embryo which lead to many different parts of the circulatory system. They primarily derive from plexuses formed from angioblasts. Within them, vacuoles appear through liquefaction of the central part of the syncytium into plasma. The lumen of the blood vessels thus formed is probably intracellular. The flattened cells at the periphery form the endothelium. The nucleated red blood corpuscles develop either from small masses of the original angioblast left attached to the inner wall of the lumen or directly from the flat endothelial cells. In either case the syncytial mass thus formed projects from and is attached to the wall of the vessel. Such a mass is known as a blood island and hemoglobin gradually accumulates within it. Later the cells on the surface round up, giving the mass a mulberry-like appearance. Then the red blood cells break loose and are carried away in the plasma. Such free blood cells continue to divide. Blood islands have been seen in the area vasculosa in the omphalomesenteric vein and arteries, and in the dorsal aorta[WP, unvetted].

类型 Nerve
上级结构 presumptive structure
拉丁名称 blood islands

常见问题

What are blood islands?
Blood islands are embryonic clusters of cells that form the earliest components of the circulatory system. They arise from angioblast precursor cells and are the sites where both blood cells and blood vessels first develop.
Where do blood islands first form in embryonic development?
Blood islands first appear in the extraembryonic mesoderm of the yolk sac wall early in embryonic development, before forming within the embryo itself. They arise from angioblast plexuses in vascular regions of the mesoderm.
How do blood islands give rise to blood vessels?
The peripheral cells of blood islands differentiate into angioblasts (endothelial precursors) that form the walls of the earliest blood vessels (hemangioblasts → endothelium). Adjacent blood islands fuse and the lumina connect to form a primitive vascular network.
How do blood islands give rise to blood cells?
The central (inner) cells of blood islands differentiate into primitive blood cells (hemocytoblasts), initially producing primitive erythrocytes. These central cells represent the earliest form of hematopoiesis (blood cell formation) in the embryo.
What is the significance of blood islands in hematopoiesis?
Blood islands represent the first wave (primitive) of hematopoiesis in the embryo, primarily producing primitive erythrocytes. Definitive hematopoiesis later shifts to the aorta-gonad-mesonephros region, fetal liver, and ultimately the bone marrow.

相关结构

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Data sources: Terminologia Anatomica, Foundational Model of Anatomy, Wikidata.