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1.
Cell lineages during development of ascidian embryos were analyzed by injection of horseradish peroxidase as a tracer enzyme into identified cells at the one-, two-, four-, and eight-cell stages of the ascidians, Halocynthia roretzi, Ciona intestinalis, and Ascidia ahodori. Identical results were obtained with eggs of the three different species examined. The first cleavage furrow coincided with the bilateral symmetry plane of the embryo. The second furrow did not always divide the embryo into anterior and posterior halves as each of the anterior and posterior cell pairs gave rise to different tissues according to their destinies, which became more definitive in the cell pairs at the eight-cell stage. Of the blastomeres constituting the eight-cell stage embryo, the a4.2 pair (the anterior animal blastomeres) differentiated into epidermis, brain, and presumably sense organ and palps. Every descendant cell of the b4.2 pair (the posterior animal blastomeres) has been thought to become epidermis; however, the horseradish peroxidase injection probe revealed that the b4.2 pair gave rise to not only epidermis but also muscle cells at the caudal tip region of the developing tailbud-stage embryos. The A4.1 pair (the anterior vegetal blastomeres) developed into endoderm, notochord, brain stem, spinal cord, and also muscle cells next the caudal tip muscle cells. From the B4.1 pair (the posterior vegetal blastomeres) originated muscle cells of the anterior and middle parts of the tail, mesenchyme, endoderm, endodermal strand, and also notochord at the caudal tip region. These results clearly demonstrate that muscle cells are derived not only from the B4.1 pair, as has hitherto been believed, but also from both the b4.2 and A4.1 pairs.  相似文献   

2.
We have observed ultrastructural features of muscle differentiation in the muscle lineage cells of cleavage-arrested whole embryos and partial embryos of ascidians. Whole embryos of Ciona intestinalis and Ascidia ceratodes were cleavage-arrested with cytochalasin B at the 8-cell stage and reared to an age equivalent to several hours after hatching; these embryos formed extensive myofilaments which were often further organized into myofibrils of different sizes and densities in the peripheral cytoplasm of the two muscle lineage blastomeres (B4.1 pair). Developing myofibrils in cleavage-arrested embryos resembled the muscle elements observed in normal hatched larvae, but were less uniformly organized. A similar development of myofilaments and myofibrils occurred in the muscle lineage cells of multicellular partial embryos reared to "hatching" age. These partial embryos resulted from the isolated muscle lineage pair (B4.1) of blastomeres of the 8-cell stage (Ciona and Ascidia), and from a muscle lineage blastomere pair (B5.2) isolated at the 16-cell stage (Ascidia). Muscle lineage cells in the partial embryos were readily identified by the dense aggregates of mitochondria in their cytoplasm. Taken together, these results from the two kinds of partial embryo effectively eliminate inductive interactions with embryonic tissues other than mesodermal as a necessary factor in the onset of self-differentiation in muscle lineage cells. The relative complexity of muscle phenotype expressed in cleavage-arrested and partial embryos attests to an unusually strong developmental autonomy in the ascidian muscle lineages. This autonomy lends further support to the theory that a localized and segregated egg cytoplasmic determinant is responsible for larval muscle development in ascidian embryos.  相似文献   

3.
Determinative properties of muscle lineages in ascidian embryos   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Blastomeres removed from early cleavage stage ascidian embryos and reared to 'maturity' as partial embryos often elaborate tissue-specific features typical of their constituent cell lineages. We used this property to study recent corrections of the ascidian larval muscle lineage and to compare the ways in which different lineages give rise to muscle. Our evaluation of muscle differentiation was based on histochemical localization and quantitative radiometric measurement of a muscle-specific acetylcholinesterase activity, and the development of myofilaments and myofibrils as observed by electron microscopy. Although the posterior-vegetal blastomeres (B4.1 pair) of the 8-cell embryo have long been believed to be the sole precursors of larval muscle, recent studies using horseradish peroxidase to mark cell lineages have shown that small numbers of muscle cells originate from the anterior-vegetal (A4.1) and posterior-animal (b4.2) blastomeres of this stage. Fully differentiated muscle expression in isolated partial embryos of A4.1-derived cells requires an association with cells from other lineages whereas muscle from B4.1 blastomeres develops autonomously. Clear differences also occurred in the time acetylcholinesterase activity was first detected in partial embryos from these two sources. Isolated b4.2 cells failed to show any muscle development even in combination with anterior-animal cells (a4.2) and are presumably even more dependent on normal cell interactions and associations. Others have noted an additional distinction between the different sources of muscle: muscle cells from non-B4.1 lineages occur exclusively in the distal part of the tail, while the B4.1 descendants contribute those cells in the proximal and middle regions. During the course of ascidian larval evolution tail muscle probably had two origins: the primary lineage (B4.1) whose fate was set rigidly at early cleavage stages and secondarily evolved lineages which arose later by recruitment of cells from other tissues resulting in increased tail length. In contrast to the B4.1 lineage, muscle development in the secondary lineages is controlled less rigidly by processes that depend on cell interactions.  相似文献   

4.
Summary

Ultrastructural features of larval notochord cell differentiation, sheath (membrane leaflets and filaments) and vacuoles of intracellular colloid, were found in some cells of certain partial embryos of the ascidian, Ciona intestinalis. As expected from established lineage fate maps, mature quarter-embryos developing from microsurgically isolated anterior-vegetal blastomeres (A4.1 pair) at the 8-cell stage had some cells with the notochord features. Such cells, however, also occurred in quarter-embryos resulting from the posterior-vegetal blastomere pair (B4.1) and in partial embryos derived from the B5.1 cell pair isolated at the next cleavage of the B4.1 blastomeres. These findings confirm a prediction of additional notochord cell fates from a recent revision of the ascidian lineage map based on cell marking with microinjected horseradish peroxidase. Partial embryos obtained from other lineages of the 8- and 16-cell stages did not develop notochord cells.  相似文献   

5.
Utilizing a muscle-specific monoclonal antibody (Mu-2) as a probe, we analysed developmental mechanisms involved in muscle cell differentiation in ascidian embryos. The antigen recognized by Mu-2 was a single polypeptide with a relative molecular mass of about 220 X 10(3). It first appeared at the early tailbud stage and continued to be expressed until the swimming larva stage. There were distinct and separate puromycin and actinomycin D sensitivity periods during the occurrence of the antigen, suggesting the new synthesis of the polypeptide by developing muscle cells. Embryos that had been permanently arrested with aphidicolin in the early cleavage stages up to the 32-cell stage did not express the antigen. DNA replications may be required for the antigen expression. Embryos that had been arrested with cytochalasin B in the 8-cell and later stages developed the antigen, and the number and position of the arrested blastomeres exhibiting the differentiation marker almost corresponded to those of the B4.1-line muscle lineage. Furthermore, in quarter embryos developed from each blastomere pair isolated from the 8-cell embryo, all the B4.1 as well as a part of b4.2 partial embryos expressed the antigen, while the a4.2 and A4.1 partial embryos did not show the antigen expression. These results may provide further support for the existence of cytoplasmic determinants for muscle cell differentiation in this mosaic egg.  相似文献   

6.
Muscle cells of the ascidian larva originate from three different lines of progenitor cells, the B-line, A-line and b-line. Experiments with 8-cell embryos have indicated that isolated blastomeres of the B-line (primary) muscle lineage show autonomous development of a muscle-specific enzyme, whereas blastomeres of the A-line and b-line (secondary) muscle lineage rarely develop the enzyme in isolation. In order to study the mechanisms by which different lines of progenitors are determined to give rise to muscle, blastomeres were isolated from embryos of Halocynthia roretzi at the later cleavage stages when conspicuous restriction of the developmental fate of blastomeres had already occurred. Partial embryos derived from B-line muscle-lineage cells of the 64-cell embryo (B7.4, B7.5 and B7.8) showed autonomous expression of specific features of muscle cells (acetylcholinesterase, filamentous actin and muscle-specific antigen). In contrast, b-line muscle-lineage cells, even those isolated from the 110-cell embryo (b8.17 and b8.19), did not express any muscle-specific features, even though their developmental fate was mainly restricted to generation of muscle. Isolated A-line cells from the 64-cell embryos (A7.8) did not show any features of muscle differentiation, whereas some isolated A-line cells from the 110-cell embryos (A8.16) developed all three above-mentioned features of muscle cells. This transition was shown to occur during the eighth cell cycle. These results suggest that the mechanism involved in the process of determination of the secondary-lineage muscle cells differs from that of the primary-lineage muscle cells. Interaction with cells of other lineages may be required for the determination of secondary precursors to muscle cells. The presumptive b-line and A-line muscle cells that failed to express muscle-specific features in isolation did not develop into epidermal cells. Thus, although interactions between cells may be required for muscle determination in secondary lineages, the process may represent a permissive type of induction and may differ from the processes of induction of mesoderm in amphibian embryos.  相似文献   

7.
Cytoplasm from muscle lineage blastomeres of an ascidian embryo can cause cells of a nonmuscle lineage to produce larval tail muscle acetylcholinesterase. Muscle cytoplasm was partitioned microsurgically into epidermal lineage blastomeres at the eight-cell stage. Posterior half-embryos (the two B3 cells) of Ascidia nigra were obtained first by separating the anterior and posterior blastomere pairs at the four-cell stage. At third cleavage, the two B3 cells divide into an ectodermal cell pair that gives rise solely to epidermal tissues, and a mesodermal-endodermal blastomere pair from which the tail muscle cells are derived. When the ectodermal and mesendodermal blastomere pairs were isolated from one another by microsurgery and reared as partial embryos, only cells originating from the mesendodermal blastomeres produced a histochemical acetylcholinesterase reaction. Immediately after cleavage of the isolated B3 cells into ectodermal and mesendodermal cell pairs, the cleavage furrows could be made to disappear by pressing firmly on the mesendodermal cells with a microneedle. Repeated up and down pressure with the microneedle at a new position across the mesendodermal cells caused furrows to reestablish in the new position, thereby incorporating mesodermal cytoplasm and increasing the size of the ectodermal cells. The cytoplasmically altered ectodermal blastomere pairs, which became detached from the mesendodermal cells by this microsurgical procedure, continued to divide and were reared to “larval” stages. One-third of these epidermal partial larvae produced patches of cells containing acetylcholinesterase. These results lend further support to the theory that choice of particular differentiation pathways (embryonic determination) in ascidian embryos is mediated by segregation of specific egg cytoplasmic determinants.  相似文献   

8.
Acetylcholinesterase is a histospecific marker of cell differentiation occurring only in the muscle and mesenchyme tissues of the ascidian embryo. The distribution of functional mRNA coding for this enzyme has been investigated and it is shown here that only cells of muscle and mesenchyme lineages possess such a template. Blastomeres of four cell lineage quadrants were separated microsurgically from eight-cell-stage embryos of Ciona intestinalis and raised in isolation until muscle development was well advanced. Measurement of enzyme activity in the resulting partial embryos revealed that acetylcholinesterase was limited to descendants of one blastomere pair, the B4.1 blastomeres containing muscle and mesenchyme lineages. To study the tissue distribution of acetylcholinesterase mRNA, RNA from partial embryos was translated in Xenopus laevis oocytes. When oocytes were injected with an appropriate template, they synthesized a biologically active acetylcholinesterase that could be selectively immunopurified with an antiserum to the ascidian enzyme. Under the conditions used the quantity of acetylcholinesterase mRNA was directly related to the enzyme activity in immunoprecipitates. Acetylcholinesterase mRNA was found only in B4.1 lineage partial embryos where it occurred in approximately the same amount as in whole embryos of the same age. Since there is a limited period from gastrulation until the middle tail-formation stage when functional acetylcholinesterase mRNA accumulates, the results of our mRNA distribution experiments strongly suggest that the gene for ascidian acetylcholinesterase is active only in muscle and mesenchyme tissues. The histospecific occurrence of this enzyme apparently does not involve selective, cell-specific control of translation.  相似文献   

9.
Cell lineages during development of ascidian embryos were analyzed by injecting horseradish peroxidase as a tracer enzyme into identified cells of the 16-cell and 32-cell stage embryos of Halocynthia roretzi. Most of the blastomeres of these embryos developed more kinds of tissues than have hitherto been reported, and therefore, the developmental fates of each blastomere are more complex. It has been thought that every blastomere of the 64-cell stage ascidian embryo gives rise to only one kind of tissues, but the finding that the several blastomeres at the 32-cell stage developed into at least three different kinds of tissues, clearly indicates that the stage at which the fates of every blastomere are determined to one tissue is later than the 64-cell stage. The results also clearly demonstrate that muscle cells are derived not only from B-line cells (B5.1, B5.2, B6.3, and B6.4) but also from A-line cells (A5.2 and A6.4) and b-line cells (b5.3 and b6.5). Based on the present analysis as well as other studies, complete cell lineages of muscle cells up to their terminal differentiation have been proposed. In addition, lineages of nervous system, notochord, and epidermis are also discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The 8-cell stage embryos of the ascidian Halocynthia roretzi which had been prevented from undergoing further divisions by continuous treatment with cytochalasin B could develop histospecific muscle acetylcholinesterase in two blastomeres (B4.1 and B4.1 cells). If the cytoplasm of a B4.1 or B4.1 cell was transplanted by microinjection into either an A4.1 or A4.1 cell of recipient embryos and the transplanted embryos were permanently cleavage-arrested with cytochalasin B, a few eventually developed AChE in three blastomeres instead of in just the two blastomeres found in cleavage-arrested control embryos. Judging from the relative positions of the blastomeres, the third AChE-producing cells appeared to be the A4.1 or A4.1 cells injected with the cytoplasm of B4.1 or B4.1. Although the success rate was considerably low, this result might indicate the presence in the cytoplasm of a determinant for the muscle-specific enzyme development.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Cell-lineage analysis has demonstrated that a pair of the right and left A7.6 cells of a 64-cell embryo of the ascidian Halocynthia roretzi, descendants of A4.1 cells of an 8-cell embryo, give rise to trunk lateral cells (TLCs). In this study, in order to investigate cellular mechanisms involved in the specification of TLCs, we have examined the expression of a TLC-specific antigen in cleavage-arrested embryos and in quarter partial embryos. Although cleavage arrest of embryos by treatment with cytochalasin B at early stages, prior to and including the 16-cell stage, inhibited expression of the TLC-specific antigen, embryos arrested at the 32-cell stage and at later stages developed the antigen. The only blastomeres exhibiting expression of the antigen were the presumptive TLCs, as predicted by cell-lineage assignments. When the developmental potential of quarter embryos that originated from four isolated blastomere-pairs (a4.2, b4.2, A4.1, and B4.1 pairs) of an 8-cell embryo was examined, the A4.1 quarter embryos, which are developmentally fated to give rise to TLCs, rarely showed evidence of expression of the antigen. Expression of the antigen was not observed in a4.2 and b4.2 quarter embryos, which are not associated with the TLC fate. By contrast, expression of the antigen was detected in about a half of the B4.1 quarter embryos which are also not associated with the TLC fate. These results are discussed with reference to the relationship between TLCs and mesenchyme cells.  相似文献   

13.
Cell lineages during embryogenesis of the ascidian Halocynthia roretzi were analyzed up until the stage where each blastomere was fated to be only a single tissue type (i.e., the tissue restricted stage) by intracellular injection of horseradish peroxidase using the iontophoretic injection method. Initially, the developmental fates of all blastomeres of the 64-cell stage embryo were examined, and thereafter, only the fates of daughter blastomeres of those blastomeres that were not tissue restricted at the 64-cell stage were traced. The developmental fates of blastomeres were highly invariant except for two candidates for "equivalence groups" (J. Kimble, J. Sulston, and J. White (1979). In "Cell Lineage, Stem Cells and Cell Determination," pp. 59-68. Elsevier, Amsterdam/New York), in which cellular interaction is suggested to be involved in the specification of the fates. The right and left a8.25 cells gave rise to the otolith and ocellus, and the right and left b8.17 cells gave rise to the spinal cord and endodermal strand in a complementary manner. No fixed relationship existed between the position of the blastomere and its derivative. Most restrictions of cell fates occurred early in cleavage. The numbers of blastomeres which generated a single type of tissue were 44 at the 64-cell stage and 94 at the 110-cell stage. Eight pairs of blastomeres had not yet become tissue restricted by the 110-cell stage. Almost complete lineages of epidermis, nervous system, muscle, mesenchyme, notochord, and endodermal tissues were described, and a fate map was constructed for the blastula. For certain tissues, the primordial cells occupied two different regions. Supplementary investigations of the lineage of muscle cells were also performed on embryos of another species, Ciona intestinalis.  相似文献   

14.
Ascidian early embryonic cells undergo cell differentiation without cell cleavage, thus enabling mixture of cell fate determinants in single cells, which will not be possible in mammalian systems. Either cell in a two-cell embryo (2C cell) has multiple fates and develops into any cell types in a tadpole. To find the condition for controlled induction of a specific cell type, cleavage-arrested cell triplets were prepared in various combinations. They were 2C cells in contact with a pair of anterior neuroectoderm cells from eight-cell embryos (2C-aa triplet), with a pair of presumptive notochordal neural cells (2C-AA triplet), with a pair of presumptive posterior epidermal cells (2C-bb triplet), and with a pair of presumptive muscle cells (2C-BB triplet). The fate of the 2C cell was electrophysiologically identified. When two-cell embryos had been fertilized 3 h later than eight-cell embryos and triplets were formed, the 2C cells became either anterior-neuronal, posterior-neuronal or muscle cells, depending on the cell type of the contacting cell pair. When two-cell embryos had been fertilized earlier than eight-cell embryos, most 2C cells became epidermal. When two- and eight-cell embryos had been simultaneously fertilized, the 2C cells became any one of three cell types described above or the epidermal cell type. Differentiation of the ascidian 2C cell into major cell types was reproducibly induced by selecting the type of contacting cell pair and the developmental time difference between the contacting cell pair and 2C cell. We discuss similarities between cleavage-arrested 2C cells and vertebrate embryonic stem cells and propose the ascidian 2C cell as a simple model for toti-potent stem cells.  相似文献   

15.
Summary We have examined the potential of fluorescent latex microparticles for use as a short term cell lineage marker in the mouse preimplantation embryo. Isolated blastomeres and intact embryos rapidly adsorb and subsequently endocytose the particles (0.2 m diameter) from a monodisperse suspension in normal medium, so that cytoplasmic endocytic organelles, but not the cytosol itself, becomes labelled. Latex fluorescence, either within intact embryos, disaggregated cells or thick resin sections, is stable during UV irradiation. The development of labelled embryos, both in terms of sequential morphological changes and their time of expression, was comparable to controls and resulted in blastocysts with normal cell numbers and capacity for tissue differentiation. Latex fluorescence is preserved within all the progeny of labelled blastomeres over several cell cycles (e.g. from 8-cell stage to 64-cell stage) and is not transmitted to unlabelled cells either by exocytosis or via midbodies. The particles are particularly suitable for labelling exclusively the entire population of outside cells in the intact embryo from the 16-cell stage onwards.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Anural ascidians do not develop into a conventional tailed larva with differentiated muscle cells, however, embryos of some anural ascidian species retain the ability to express acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in a vestigial muscle cell lineage. This study examines the number of AChE-positive cells that develop in the anural ascidian Molgula occulta relative to that in the closely related urodele (tailed) species, Molgula oculata. Histochemical assays showed that M. oculata embryos develop 36 to 38 AChE-positive cells, consistent with the number of tail muscle cells expressed in other urodele ascidians. In contrast, M. occulta embryos develop a mean of only 20 AChE-positive cells in their vestigial muscle lineage. Cleavage-arrested embryos of the anural species express AChE only in B-line blastomeres, showing that the vestigial muscle lineage cells are derived from the primary muscle lineage. Less than the expected number of AChE-positive B-line cells develop in cleavage-arrested anural embryos, however, implying that the allocation of primary muscle lineage cells is decreased. Eggs of the anural species can be fertilized with sperm of the urodele species resulting in the development of some larvae that contain a short tail and/or a brain melanocyte, specific features of urodele larvae. The typical urodele number of AChE-positive cells is restored in some of these hybrid embryos. Both primary and secondary muscle lineages are restored because cleavage-arrested hybrid embryos develop more AChE-positive cells in the B-line blastomeres and supernumerary AChE-positive cells in the A-line blastomeres. Hybrid embryos that develop the urodele complement of AChE-positive cells also form a tail and/or a brain melanocyte showing that restoration of muscle lineage cells is coupled to the development of other urodele features. AChE expression occurred in anural embryos with disorganized or dissociated blastomeres, indicating that AChE expression is determined autonomously. It is concluded that an evolutionary change in the allocation of larval muscle lineage cells occurs during development of the anural ascidian M. occulta which can be restored by interspecific hybridization with the urodele ascidian M. oculata.  相似文献   

18.
Cell and developmental studies have clarified how, by the time of implantation, the mouse embryo forms three primary cell lineages: epiblast (EPI), primitive endoderm (PE), and trophectoderm (TE). However, it still remains unknown when cells allocated to these three lineages become determined in their developmental fate. To address this question, we studied the developmental potential of single blastomeres derived from 16- and 32-cell stage embryos and supported by carrier, tetraploid blastomeres. We were able to generate singletons, identical twins, triplets, and quadruplets from individual inner and outer cells of 16-cell embryos and, sporadically, foetuses from single cells of 32-cell embryos. The use of embryos constitutively expressing GFP as the donors of single diploid blastomeres enabled us to identify their cell progeny in the constructed 2n↔4n blastocysts. We showed that the descendants of donor blastomeres were able to locate themselves in all three first cell lineages, i.e., epiblast, primitive endoderm, and trophectoderm. In addition, the application of Cdx2 and Gata4 markers for trophectoderm and primitive endoderm, respectively, showed that the expression of these two genes in the descendants of donor blastomeres was either down- or up-regulated, depending on the cell lineage they happened to occupy. Thus, our results demonstrate that up to the early blastocysts stage, the destiny of at least some blastomeres, although they have begun to express markers of different lineage, is still labile.  相似文献   

19.
The two muscle lineage blastomeres were removed surgically from Ciona intestinalis embryos at the eight-cell stage and allowed to develop in isolation. Acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme that occurs only in muscle cells of the developing larva, was detected histochemically in progeny cells of these isolated blastomers. Acetylcholinesterase differentiation in muscle lineage cells is not, therefore, dependent on inductive interactions with embryonic tissues derived from other eight-cell stage blastomeres.  相似文献   

20.
The ascidian larva contains tubular neural tissue, one of the prominent anatomical features of the chordates. The cell-cleavage pattern and cell maps of the nervous system have been described in the ascidian larva in great detail. Cell types in the neural tube, however, have not yet been defined due to the lack of a suitable molecular marker. In the present work, we identified neuronal cells in the caudal neural tube of theHalocynthiaembryo by utilizing a voltage-gated Na+channel gene, TuNa I, as a molecular marker. Microinjection of a lineage tracer revealed that TuNa I-positive neurons in the brain and in the trunk epidermis are derived from the a-line of the eight-cell embryo, which includes cell fates to epidermal and neural tissue. On the other hand, TuNa I-positive cells in the more caudal part of the neural tissue were not stained by microinjection into the a-line. These neurons are derived from the A-line, which contains fates of notochord and muscle, but not of epidermis. Electron microscopic observation confirmed that A-line-derived neurons consist of motor neurons innervating the dorsal and ventral muscle cells. Isolated A-line blastomeres have active membrane excitability distinct from those of the a-line-derived neuronal cells after culture under cleavage arrest, suggesting that the A-line gives rise to a neuronal cell distinct from that of the a-lineage. TuNa I expression in the a-line requires signals from another cell lineage, whereas that in the A-line occurs without tight cell contact. Thus, there are at least two distinct neuronal lineages with distinct cellular behaviors in the ascidian larva: the a-line gives rise to numerous neuronal cells, including sensory cells, controlled by a mechanism similar to vertebrate neural induction, whereas A-line cells give rise to motor neurons and ependymal cells in the caudal neural tube that develop in close association with the notochord or muscle lineage, but not with the epidermal lineage.  相似文献   

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