Growth of opossum embryos in vitro during organogenesis

Development ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-123
Author(s):  
D. A. T. New ◽  
M. Mizell ◽  
D. L. Cockroft

Opossum embryos, explanted between primitive streak and late fetal stages, were grown in culture for periods of 20–30 h. Many of the explants had a good heartbeat and blood circulation in embryo and yolk sac after 12 h, and a few after 24 h. Growth of the embryos included formation of the neural tube and body flexures, increase in the number of somites, differentiation of the limbs and digits, and development of the amnion and allantois. Embryos explanted during the last day of gestation showed persistent and vigorous body movements in culture, particularly of the forelimbs, head and tongue.

Development ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-174
Author(s):  
Nelly Bennett

The detection of a specific enzyme (cysteine lyase) of the yolk-sac endoderm by a very sensitive method is employed to characterize cell differentiation during the early stages of endoderm organogenesis in the chick. The first cells to contain active cysteine lyase are found in the germ wall at the primitive streak stage. In vivo observations establish a relation between the morphological specialization and organization of endodermal cells, their loss of mitotic activity and the increase in cysteine lyase activity. They suggest an influence of the mesoderm on endoderm differentiation. In vitro experiments confirm the existence in the yolk-sac endoderm of an incompatibility between cell proliferation and differentiation, as well as the action of the mesoderm on both the structural organization of the endoblast and the appearance of cysteine lyase; this last action seems to be due mainly to blood cells; chicken and rabbit blood cells are equally active. The problems of the origin of the endoderm and of the interactions occurring during the organogenesis of the yolk-sac endoderm are discussed.


Development ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 227-235
Author(s):  
D. A. T. New ◽  
P. T. Coppola

Rat embryos explanted with their membranes at head-fold stage (9½ days gestation) formed an allantoic placenta which enlarged in culture and developed a foetal blood circulation. Embryos explanted at early somite stages (10½ days) also formed a growing allantoic placenta but only after removal of most of the ectoplacental trophoblast. Assays of total protein in the embryo and placenta suggested that, in the absence of a maternal blood circulation to the placenta, embryo and placenta compete for the respiratory and nutritional resources obtained through the yolk-sac.


Development ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 627-652 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.A. Lawson ◽  
R.A. Pedersen

The fate of the embryonic endoderm (generally called visceral embryonic endoderm) of prestreak and early primitive streak stages of the mouse embryo was studied in vitro by microinjecting horseradish peroxidase into single axial endoderm cells of 6.7-day-old embryos and tracing the labelled descendants either through gastrulation (1 day of culture) or to early somite stages (2 days of culture). Descendants of endoderm cells from the anterior half of the axis were found at the extreme cranial end of the embryo after 1 day and in the visceral yolk sac endoderm after 2 days, i.e. they were displaced anteriorly and anterolaterally. Descendants of cells originating over and near the anterior end of the early primitive streak, i.e. posterior to the distal tip of the egg cylinder, were found after 1 day over the entire embryonic axis and after 2 days in the embryonic endoderm at the anterior intestinal portal, in the foregut, along the trunk and postnodally, as well as anteriorly and posteriorly in the visceral yolk sac. Endoderm covering the posterior half of the early primitive streak contributed to postnodal endoderm after 1 day (at the late streak stage) and mainly to posterior visceral yolk sac endoderm after 2 days. Clonal descendants of axial endoderm were located after 2 days either over the embryo or in the yolk sac; the few exceptions spanned the caudal end of the embryo and the posterior yolk sac. The clonal analysis also showed that the endoderm layer along the posterior half of the axis of prestreak- and early-streak-stage embryos is heterogeneous in its germ layer fate. Whereas the germ layer location of descendants from anterior sites did not differ after 1 day from that expected from the initial controls (approx. 90% exclusively in endoderm), only 62% of the successfully injected posterior sites resulted in labelled cells exclusively in endoderm; the remainder contributed partially or entirely to ectoderm and mesoderm. This loss from the endoderm layer was compensated by posterior-derived cells that remained in endoderm having more surviving descendants (8.4 h population doubling time) than did anterior-derived cells (10.5 h population doubling time). There was no indication of cell death at the prestreak and early streak stages; at least 93% of the cells were proliferating and more than half of the total axial population were in, or had completed, a third cell cycle after 22 h culture.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.A. Quinlan ◽  
E.A. Williams ◽  
S.S. Tan ◽  
P.P. Tam

The developmental fate of cells in the distal region (distal cap) of the epiblast was analysed by fate mapping studies. The displacement and differentiation of cells labelled in situ with carbocyanine dyes and lacZ-expressing cells grafted to the distal cap were studied over a 48-hour period of in vitro development. The distal cap epiblast differentiates predominantly into neurectodermal cells. Cells at the anterior site of the distal cap colonise the fore-, mid- and hindbrain and contribute to non-neural ectoderm cells of the amnion and craniofacial surface ectoderm. Those cells in the most distal region of the epiblast contribute to all three brain compartments as well as the spinal cord and the posterior neuropore. Cells at the posterior site of the distal cap are mainly localised to the caudal parts of the neural tube. A minor contribution to the embryonic (paraxial and lateral) and extraembryonic (allantoic and yolk sac) mesoderm is also found. Epiblast cells located outside the distal cap give rise to surface ectoderm and other non-ectodermal derivatives, with only a minor contribution to the neuroectoderm. Results of this study provide compelling evidence that the precursor population of the neural tube is contained in the distal cap epiblast of the early-primitive-streak-stage embryo. Furthermore, the regionalisation of cell fate within this small population suggest that a preliminary craniocaudal patterning may have occurred in the neural primordium before neurulation.


Development ◽  
1964 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-111
Author(s):  
D. A. T. New ◽  
K. F. Stein

Despite recent successes with the cultivation of mouse and rabbit eggs (references in Austin, 1961, pp. 144–7) techniques for the cultivation of post-implantation mammalian embryos have not hitherto advanced beyond those devised in the 1930's. Jolly & Lieure (1938) obtained development of rat and guinea-pig embryos explanted into homologous serum at stages between primitive streak and a few somites. They report that of their explanted rat embryos 37 per cent, developed an embryonic axis with a rhythmically beating heart, but only 9 per cent, a functioning circulation. None formed limb buds or a functioning allantoic circulation. Nicholas & Rudnick (1934, 1938) appear to have had a similar degree of success with rat embryos explanted into heparinized rat plasma and embryo extract. Waddington & Waterman (1933) explanted rabbit blastodiscs of primitive streak to 3-somite stages on to plasma clots; in the most successful cultures a 6–9 somite embryo was obtained with neural tube and beating heart, but without any blood circulation.


2007 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-52
Author(s):  
Koh-ichi Atoh ◽  
Manae S. Kurokawa ◽  
Hideshi Yoshikawa ◽  
Chieko Masuda ◽  
Erika Takada ◽  
...  

Lab on a Chip ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
YUHAO QIANG ◽  
Jia Liu ◽  
Ming Dao ◽  
E Du

Red blood cells (RBCs) are subjected to recurrent changes in shear stress and oxygen tension during blood circulation. The cyclic shear stress has been identified as an important factor that...


2000 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 229-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shin-ichiro NAKAGAWA ◽  
Sakura SABURI ◽  
Keitaro YAMANOUCHI ◽  
Hideaki TOJO ◽  
Chikashi TACHI

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