The development of embryos derived from the transplantation of neural ectoderm cell nuclei in Xenopus laevis

1964 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 467-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
John D. Simnett
1996 ◽  
Vol 133 (5) ◽  
pp. 955-969 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Fang ◽  
R M Benbow

Quiescent cells from adult vertebrate liver and contact-inhibited or serum-deprived tissue cultures are active metabolically but do not carry out nuclear DNA replication and cell division. Replication of intact nuclei isolated from either quiescent Xenopus liver or cultured Xenopus A6 cells in quiescence was barely detectable in interphase extracts of Xenopus laevis eggs, although Xenopus sperm chromatin was replicated with approximately 100% efficiency in the same extracts. Permeabilization of nuclei from quiescent Xenopus liver or cultured Xenopus epithelial A6 cells did not facilitate efficient replication in egg extracts. Moreover, replication of Xenopus sperm chromatin in egg extracts was strongly inhibited by a soluble extract of isolated Xenopus liver nuclei; in contrast, complementary-strand synthesis on single-stranded DNA templates in egg extracts was not affected. Inhibition was specific to endogenous molecules localized preferentially in quiescent as opposed to proliferating cell nuclei, and was not due to suppression of cdk2 kinase activity. Extracts of Xenopus liver nuclei also inhibited growth of sperm nuclei formed in egg extracts. However, the rate and extent of decondensation of sperm chromatin in egg extracts were not affected. The formation of prereplication centers detected by anti-RP-A antibody was not affected by extracts of liver nuclei, but formation of active replication foci was blocked by the same extracts. Inhibition of DNA replication was alleviated when liver nuclear extracts were added to metaphase egg extracts before or immediately after Ca++ ion-induced transition to interphase. A plausible interpretation of our data is that endogenous inhibitors of DNA replication play an important role in establishing and maintaining a quiescent state in Xenopus cells, both in vivo and in cultured cells, perhaps by negatively regulating positive modulators of the replication machinery.


1996 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 399-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
A M de Mazière ◽  
W J Hage ◽  
G A Ubbels

To study the cell cleavage pattern in experimentally treated Xenopus laevis blastulae, we devised a method to visualize all cell nuclei, whether in interphase or in a mitotic phase, in whole-mount embryos using confocal laser scanning microscopy. Optimal staining conditions were defined for the recently commercialized cyanine nucleic acid stain TO-PRO-3, which is excited by a 647-nm laser beam and fluoresces in the far red of the spectrum. This is beyond the spectral range of autofluorescence caused by most biomolecules and, in particular, by the high amount of yolk granules in these embryos. The quality of the TO-PRO-3 image was compared to that after nuclear staining with BOBO-3, another cyanine dye that fluoresces at slightly shorter wavelengths. In the proposed procedure, special attention is paid to permeabilization of the membranes to the dyes and to bleaching of the natural pigment of the embryos with maximal preservation of cellular and nuclear structures. Because of its emission maximum at 661 nm, TO-PRO-3 is a promising nuclear stain for specimens with special background problems and for multicolor fluorescence microscopy.


1972 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 569-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lesley Watson Coggins ◽  
Joseph G. Gall

Recently metamorphosed female Xenopus laevis toads were injected with tritiated thymidine. Animals were kept at 20°C and were sacrificed 1–23 days after isotope injection. Radio-autographs of squash preparations of the ovaries were made. The progress of labeled germ cell nuclei was followed to obtain information on the time course of early meiosis and extra-chromosomal DNA synthesis. Premeiotic S was estimated to take not more than 7 days. Leptotene takes 4 days, zygotene takes 5 days, and pachytene was estimated to be completed in about 18 days. The major period of amplification of the extrachromosomal DNA occurs in pachytene and takes about 13 days. A low level of synthesis was observed before and after this period, in zygotene and late pachytene-early diplotene, extending the total time for extrachromosomal DNA synthesis during meiosis to about 18 days. These data allowed the calculation to be made that one round of replication of the amplified DNA takes between 1.2 and 3.0 days. It was also found that in both oogonial and premeiotic interphases, the nucleolus-associated DNA shows asynchronous (probably late) labeling with respect to the chromosomes.


2007 ◽  
Vol 306 (1) ◽  
pp. 431
Author(s):  
Christy Cortez ◽  
Laura Hernandez-Lagunas ◽  
Chi Zhang ◽  
Irene F. Choi ◽  
Letitia Kwok ◽  
...  

1987 ◽  
Vol 105 (5) ◽  
pp. 2359-2372 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Levi ◽  
K L Crossin ◽  
G M Edelman

Studies of chicken embryos have demonstrated that cell adhesion molecules are important in embryonic induction and are expressed in defined sequences during embryogenesis and histogenesis. To extend these observations and to provide comparable evidence for heterochronic changes in such sequences during evolution, the local distributions of the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) and of the liver cell adhesion molecule (L-CAM) were examined in Xenopus laevis embryos by immunohistochemical and biochemical techniques. Because of the technical difficulties presented by the existence of multiple polypeptide forms of CAMs and by autofluorescence of yolk-containing cells, special care was taken in choosing and characterizing antibodies, fluorophores, and embedding procedures. Both N-CAM and L-CAM were found at low levels in pregastrulation embryos. During gastrulation, N-CAM levels increased in the presumptive neural epithelium and decreased in the endoderm, but L-CAM continued to be expressed in all cells including endodermal cells. During neurulation, the level of N-CAM expression in the neural ectoderm increased considerably, while remaining constant in non-neural ectoderm and diminishing in the somites; in the notochord, N-CAM was expressed transiently. Prevalence modulation was also seen at all sites of secondary induction: both CAMs increased in the sensory layer of the ectoderm during condensation of the placodes. During organogenesis, the expression of L-CAM gradually diminished in the nervous system while N-CAM expression remained high. In all other organs examined, the amount of one or the other CAM decreased, so that by stage 50 these two molecules were expressed in non-overlapping territories. Embryonic and adult tissues were compared to search for concordance of CAM expression at later stages. With few exceptions, the tissue distributions of N-CAM and L-CAM were similar in the frog and in the chicken from early times of development. In contrast to previous observations in the chicken and in the mouse, N-CAM expression was found to be high in the adult liver of Xenopus, whereas L-CAM expression was low. In the adult brain, N-CAM was expressed as three components of apparent molecular mass 180, 140, and 120 kD, respectively; in earlier stages of development only the 140-kD component could be detected. In the liver, a single N-CAM band appears at 160 kD, raising the possibility that this band represents an unusual N-CAM polypeptide. L-CAM appeared at all stages as a 124-kD molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2008 ◽  
Vol 314 (2) ◽  
pp. 351-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christy Cortez Rossi ◽  
Laura Hernandez-Lagunas ◽  
Chi Zhang ◽  
Irene F. Choi ◽  
Letitia Kwok ◽  
...  

Development ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 203-209
Author(s):  
C. C. Ford ◽  
J. B. Gurdon

A method is described for the enucleation and complete healing of Xenopus oocytes so that the enucleated oocytes withstand multiple injections and culture for several days. The oocytes are defolliculated and enucleated manually and allowed to heal in a potassium phosphate buffer. Oocytes enucleated in this way support RNA synthesis by injected HeLa-cell nuclei 3 days later. This method is valuable in providing a low-background system in which transcription of injected nuclei can be studied.


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