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Development, Vol 101, Issue 1 23-32 Copyright © 1987 by Company of Biologists


Journal Articles

The development of animal cap cells in Xenopus: the effects of environment on the differentiation and the migration of grafted ectodermal cells

EA Jones and HR Woodland

We have used blastocoel and vegetal pole grafts to investigate the effect of environment on differentiation and movement of animal pole cells of Xenopus. In the blastocoel of embryos earlier than stage 10, fragments of animal pole primarily form mesoderm. The cells are either integrated into normal host tissues or they organize a secondary posterior dorsal axis. If either host or graft is later than stage 9 the graft forms ectoderm and its cells all migrate into the host ectoderm. Inner layer animal cells form sensorial layer; outer cells move to the epidermis. Thus considerable powers of appropriate movement are seen. In the vegetal pole no movement occurs. If the graft is stage 9 or earlier, or the host is stage 101/2 or earlier, the graft forms mesoderm, including striated muscle in the gut. This shows that muscle can develop in wholly the wrong environment, it suggests that the dorsal inductive signal from mesoderm is rather general in the vegetal mass and suggests that dorsal mesoderm development involves little subsequent adjustability. If the host is stage 11 or later, or the graft later than stage 9, the graft forms epidermis in the gut. This shows that the epidermal pathway of development is also insensitive to environment.


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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 1987