Regulative capacity of the archenteron during gastrulation in the sea urchin.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Gastrulation in the sea urchin involves an extensive rearrangement of cells of the archenteron giving rise to secondary mesenchyme at the archenteron tip followed by the foregut, midgut and hindgut. To examine the regulative capacity of this structure, pieces of the archenteron were removed or transplanted at different stages of gastrulation. After removal of any or all parts of the archenteron, the remaining veg 1 and /or veg 2 tissue regulated to replace the missing parts. Endoderm transplanted to ectopic positions also regulated to that new position in the archenteron. This ability to replace or regulate endoderm did not decline until after full elongation of the archenteron was completed. When replacement occurred, the new gut was smaller relative to the remaining embryo but the recognizable morphology of the archenteron was re-established. Long after the archenteron reveals territorial specification through expression of specific markers, the endodermal cells remain capable of being respecified to other gut regions. Thus, for much of gastrulation, the gut is conditionally specified. We propose that this regulative ability requires extensive and continuous short-range communication between cells of the archenteron in order to reorganize the tissues and position the boundaries of this structure even after experimental alterations.
منابع مشابه
The Mechanisms and Mechanics of Archenteron Elongation during Sea Urchin Gastrulation
Continued elongation of the archenteron during sea urchin gastrulation has long been thought to occur as a result of contraction of filopodia which are extended by secondary mesenchyme cells from the tip of the gut rudiment to the blastocoel roof. Here we present four lines of evidence which strongly suggest that forces generated within the archenteron itself can cause it to elongate. First, co...
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During sea urchin gastrulation filopodia are sent out by secondary mesenchyme cells (SMCs) at the tip of the archenteron in continual cycles of extension, attachment, and retraction. Eventually the archenteron ceases its elongation and its tip localizes to the animal pole region of the embryo (Gustafson and Kinnander, 1956, Exp. Cell Res. 11, 36-57; Dan and Okazaki, 1956, Biol. Bull. 110, 29-42...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Development
دوره 122 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1996