10. Following statements are being made regarding specification determination during animal development: A. During the course of commitment, the cell may not appear different from its nearest or most distant neighbors in the embryo and show no visible signs of differentiation; but its developmental fate is restricted. B. At the stage of specification, cell commitment is not labile. C. A cell or tissue is determined when it is capable of differentiating autonomously even when placed into another region of the embryo, or a cluster of differently specified cells in a petri- dish D. Cytoskeletal arrangements maintain positioning of nuclei in the syncytium, which enables specification of these nuclei by opposing morphogen gradients namely Bicoid and Caudal in Drosophila E. Capacity for "mosaic" development allows cells to acquire different functions as a result of interactions with neighbouring cells. Which of the above statements are correct? (1) A B and C (2) B, C and D (3) C, D and E (4) A, C and D
  1. Following statements are being made regarding specification determination during
    animal development:
    A. During the course of commitment, the cell may not appear different from its nearest or most
    distant neighbors in the embryo and show no visible signs of differentiation; but its developmental fate is restricted.
    B. At the stage of specification, cell commitment is not labile.
    C. A cell or tissue is determined when it is capable of differentiating autonomously even when placed into another region of the embryo, or a cluster of differently specified cells in a petri- dish
    D. Cytoskeletal arrangements maintain positioning of nuclei in the syncytium, which enables
    specification of these nuclei by opposing morphogen gradients namely Bicoid and Caudal in
    Drosophila
    E. Capacity for “mosaic” development allows cells to acquire different functions as a result of
    interactions with neighbouring cells.
    Which of the above statements are correct?
    (1) A B and C (2) B, C and D
    (3) C, D and E (4) A, C and D

    In animal development, cells gradually become specialized through processes known as specification and determination. These stages dictate how cells commit to their future roles in forming tissues and organs.

    Statement A highlights that during commitment, cells may not differ visibly from neighbors, but their developmental fate is restricted. This is correct because cells become committed internally before morphological differentiation becomes apparent. They are prepared to follow a specific developmental path even without outward changes.

    Statement B says that at the specification stage, commitment is not labile (i.e., it is irreversible). This is incorrect. During the specification stage, commitment is labile or reversible, meaning cells can potentially change fate if environmental conditions vary. Irreversible commitment occurs later, at determination.

    Statement C describes determination accurately. A cell or tissue is determined when it differentiates autonomously even when placed in different embryonic contexts or isolated, showing irreversible commitment.

    Statement D involves cytoskeletal arrangements positioning nuclei in the syncytial embryo of Drosophila. This positioning enables specification via opposing morphogen gradients such as Bicoid and Caudal, which is accurate and crucial in early fruit fly development.

    Statement E claims that capacity for mosaic development allows cells to acquire different functions through interactions with neighbors. This is false. Mosaic development is characterized by autonomous specification where cell fate is intrinsic and not reliant on interactions.

    Therefore, the correct statements are A, C, and D, making option (4) A, C and D the right answer.

    This article clarifies essential developmental biology concepts by dissecting stages of cell specification and determination. Understanding these principles is critical for grasping how embryos develop complex, organized bodies from seemingly uniform cells.

2 Comments
  • Pallavi gautam
    November 26, 2025

    Yes sir

  • Muskan Yadav
    December 7, 2025

    A, C and D the right answer.

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