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1.
We examined the distribution of intermediate filaments in early quail embryos in order to determine whether these cytoskeletal proteins play a role in the epithelial-mesenchymal transitions that commonly occur during embryogenesis, e.g., the separation of neural-crest cells from the neural epithelium. The distribution of cytokeratins, vimentin, and desmin was examined in frozen sections of quail embryos at stages during which dramatic reorganizations of tissues take place. All embryonic tissues were found to contain either vimentin or cytokeratins, but the distribution of these cytoskeletal proteins was characteristic neither of the cellular organization (e.g., epithelium vs. mesenchyme) nor of the germ-layer derivation of the tissues. Cytokeratin monoclonal antibodies stained most embryonic epithelia (defined here as being sheet-like tissue with an underlying basement membrane), including epidermis and extraembryonic membranes derived in part from the ectoderm, splanchnopleure and kidney tubules derived from mesoderm, and endoderm. Cytokeratin antibodies did not stain some epithelia, including the neural tube, neural plate, and dermatome/myotome. Whereas the cytokeratin antibodies exclusively stained epithelia, the vimentin antibodies labeled both epithelial (the neural tube, dermatome/myotome, and somatic and splanchnic mesoderm) and mesenchymal tissues (the sclerotome and neural-crest cells), regardless of their germ-layer derivation. In early embryos, antibodies against desmin only stained the myotome and, in 4-day embryos, the heart and mesenchyme around the pharynx. As the distribution of intermediate-filament types did not reflect tissue organization or germ-layer derivation, we propose that the distribution of intermediate filaments in early avian embryos reflects the motile capacity of an embryonic cell and/or the presence of specialized cell junctions, i.e., desmosomes.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract. The cytokeratin polypeptides of microdissected epidermis and hair follicles from human fetuses (from week 10 of pregnancy until birth) have been analysed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Two-layered epidermis in 10-week fetuses contains major amounts of cytokeratin polypeptides typical of simple epithelia (components Nos. 8, 18, and 19 according to Moll et al. [31]). These cytokeratins are gradually reduced in their relative amounts and eventually disappear in the multilayered epidermis of later stages. At advanced stages of development, cytokeratins characteristic of adult epidermis are detected and finally predominate. These include the large and basic epidermal cytokeratin No. 1 (apparent molecular weight 68,000) which is already present in the three-layered epidermis of 13-week fetuses. Hair follicle germ cells of 13-week fetuses differ from fetal epidermal keratinocytes and show a very simple cytokeratin pattern, dominated by only two major polypeptides (Nos. 5 and 17). More developed hair follicles of 20-week fetuses have established a cytokeratin pattern similar to, but not identical with, that of hair follicles from adult skin. Different staining patterns obtained by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using cytokeratin antibodies with different specificities suggest that, in three-layered epidermis, different cytokeratin patterns might exist in the specific cell layers. Such a differential location might explain the high complexity of polypeptide components found in fetal skin. Possible contributions of peridermal cytokeratins to this complex pattern of fetal epidermis are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Cytokeratin expression in normal postnatal human thymus was studied immunohistochemically by using monoclonal antibodies against various cytokeratin polypeptides. An attempt was made to characterize cell populations giving rise to the cornified structures of Hassal's corpuscles. Monoclonal antibody KB-37, a marker of squamous epithelium basal cells, was applied to distinguish the earliest cells capable of undergoing squamous differentiation. Parts of the subcapsular epithelium were extensively stained with this reagent. This epithelium, like the basal layer of certain squamous epithelia, exibited a high incidence of cytokeratins 13 and 14, and pronounced expression of cytokeratin 19. Simple epithelium cytokeratins 8, 18, and 19 were present in the cortex. Scattered cells reacted with KB-37 antibody. All stellate epithelial cells in the medulla were positive for cytokeratin 19. Most of the medullar epithelial cells were positive for cytokeratins 13, 14 and 17 of complex epithelium, in contrast to the cortex, where only a few cells were positive for these cytokeratins. A significant proportion of the medullar cells was positive for KB-37 antigen. Cytokeratins 8 and 18 were expressed in single cells and in groups of cells surrounding Hassal's corpuscles. The outermost cells of these corpuscles were positive for cytokeratin 19 and KB-37. In the peripheral parts of Hassal's corpuscles, simple epithelium cytokeratins 7, 8, 18, and cytokeratins 4, 13, 14, and 17, characteristic of stratified nonkeratinizing epithelia, were coexpressed with keratinization-specific cytokeratins 10/11. The inner parts of the swirls were uniformly positive for cytokeratins was reduced.  相似文献   

4.
In order to characterize human notochordal tissue we investigated notochords from 32 human embryos and fetuses ranging between the 5th and 13th gestational week, using immunohistochemistry to detect intermediate filament proteins cytokeratin, vimentin and desmin, the cytokeratin subtypes 7, 8, 18, 19 and 20, epithelial membrane antigen (EMA), and adhesion molecules pan-cadherin and E-cadherin. Strong immunoreactions could be demonstrated for pan-cytokeratin, but not for desmin or EMA. Staining for pan-cadherin and weak staining for E-cadherin was found on cell membranes of notochordal cells. Also it was demonstrated that notochordal cells of all developmental stages contain the cytokeratins 8, 18 and19, but not 7 or 20. Some cells in the embryonic notochord also contained some vimentin. Vimentin reactivity increased between the 8th and 13th gestational week parallel to morphological changes leading from an epithelial phenotype to the chorda reticulum which represents a mesenchymal tissue within the intervertebral disc anlagen. This coexpression reflects the epithelial-mesenchymal transformation of the notochord, which also loses E-cadherin expression during later stages. Our findings cannot elucidate a histogenetic germ layer origin of the human notochord but demonstrate its epithelial character. Thus, morphogenetic inductive processes between the human notochord and its surrounding vertebral column anlagen can be classified as epithelial-mesenchymal interactions.  相似文献   

5.
The expression patterns of intermediate filament proteins in fetal and normal or nonpathological adult human lung tissues are described using (chain-specific) monoclonal antibodies. In early stages of development (9-10 weeks and 25 weeks of gestation) only so-called simple cytokeratins such as cytokeratins 7 (minor amounts). 8, 18 and 19 are detected in bronchial epithelial cells. At later stages of development, the cytokeratin expression patterns become more complex. The number of bronchial cells positive for cytokeratin 7 increases, but basal cells in the bronchial epithelium remain negative. These latter cells show, however, expression of cytokeratin 14 in the third trimester of gestation. Developing alveolar epithelial cells express cytokeratins 7, 8, 18 and 19. In adult human bronchial epithelium cytokeratins 4 (varying amounts), 7, 8, 13 (minor amounts), 14, 18 and 19 can be detected, with the main expression of cytokeratins 7, 8, and 18 in columnar cells and the main expression of cytokeratin 14 in basal cells. Vimentin is detected in all mesenchymal tissues. In addition, fetal lung expresses vimentin in bronchial epithelium, however, to a lesser extent with increasing age, resulting in the expression of vimentin in only few scattered bronchial cells at birth. Also in adult bronchial epithelium the expression of vimentin is noticed in part of the basal and columnar epithelial cells. Desmin filaments, present in smooth muscle cells of the lung, appear to alter their protein structure with age. In early stages of development smooth muscle cells surrounding blood vessels are partly reactive with some cytokeratin antibodies and with a polyclonal desmin antibody. At week 9-10 and week 25 of gestation a monoclonal antibody to desmin, however, is not reactive with blood vessel smooth muscle cells but is only reactive with smooth muscle cells surrounding bronchi. With increasing age the reactivity of cytokeratin antibodies with smooth muscle cells in blood vessels decreases, while the reactivity with the monoclonal desmin antibody increases. Our results show that during differentiation profound changes in the intermediate filament expression patterns occur in the different cell types of the developing lung.  相似文献   

6.
Cell sources of liver development   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The work is devoted to consequent expression of different cell types' protein markers such as vimentin, desmin, cytokeratins 7, 18, 19, stem cell markers CD34 and Bcl-2 at early stages of human prenatal development. Desmin was revealed in sinusoidal liver cells on 3.5-12 weeks of gestation, in mesenchymal cells of ventral mesentery and hepatoblasts on the 4-7 accordingly. During hepatic period of blood formation such desmin positive sinusoidal cells were found to be located close to blood cells. So called "cholangio-" cytokeratins 7 and 19 showed different expression, the first one was found only in cholangiocytes, while cytokeratin 19 existed in hepatoblasts as well until week 15-16 of prenatal development. Mesenchymal cells of ventral mesentery are positive for cytokeratins 18 and 19 even brighter than hepatoblasts in the 4-7 weeks of gestation. Bcl-2 expression was seen in the same periods in most sinusoidal and mesenchymal cells of ventral mesentery. CD34 positive cells are strongly depicted in liver sinusoids from 4th until 9th weeks of gestation, but probably they are not a source of hepatocytes' development in embryonic ontogenesis. Ventral mesentery mesenchyme was negative for this very marker. These results let us suppose that hepatocytes and cholangiocytes may develop from quite different embryonic sources: cholangyocytes grow exceptionally from duodenum epithelial cells, while there is a strong possibility that hepatoblasts formation occurs with participation of mesenchymal cells.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The expression of vimentin and keratins is analysed in the early postimplantation embryo of the rabbit at 11 days post conceptionem (d.p.c.) using a panel of monoclonal antibodies specific for single intermediate filament polypeptides (keratins 7, 8, 18, 19 and vimentin) and a pan-epithelial monoclonal keratin antibody. Electrophoretic separation of cytoskeletal preparations obtained from embryonic tissues, in combination with immunoblotting of the resulting polypeptide bands, demonstrates the presence of the rabbit equivalents of human keratins 8, 18, and vimentin in 11-day-old rabbit embryonic tissues. Immunohistochemical staining shows that several embryonic epithelia such as notochord, surface ectoderm, primitive intestinal tube, and mesonephric duct, express keratins, while others (neural tube, dermomyotome) express vimentin, and a third group (coelomic epithelia) can express both. Similarly, of the mesenchymal tissues sclerotomal mesenchyme expresses vimentin, while somatopleuric mesenchyme (abdominal wall) expresses keratins, and splanchnopleuric mesenchyme (dorsal mesentery) expresses both keratins and vimentin. While these results are in accordance with most results of keratin and vimentin expression in embryos of other species, they stand against the common concept of keratin and vimentin specificity in adult vertebrate tissues. Furthermore, keratin and vimentin are not expressed in accordance with germ layer origin of tissues in the mammalian embryo; rather the expression of these proteins seems to be related to cellular function during embryonic development.Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and by the Netherlands Cancer Foundation  相似文献   

8.
Expression patterns of intermediate filament proteins have been studied during early mouse embryo development. For this purpose, pre-implantation embryos at different stages of development after in vitro fertilization were studied using antibodies to cytokeratins, vimentin and lamins, using the indirect immunofluorescence assay. The levels of expression were quantitated and localization of the protein constituents was assessed by means of confocal scanning laser microscopy. Our studies showed that, although the embryos grew in culture, vimentin could not be detected in a filamentous organization. Immunofluorescence for cytokeratins was only positive from the 8-cell stage onwards. In the morula stage an increased level of cytokeratin expression was observed with a transitional staining pattern, combining a filamentous and a diffuse occurrence. In the blastocyst stages profound cytokeratin filaments were seen in trophoblast cells but not in the inner cell mass. When the cytokeratin subtypes were analysed separately, it became apparent that expression levels of cytokeratins 8 and 18 increased gradually up to a filamentous pattern in the blastocyst stage. Cytokeratins 7 and 19, although elevated in the latter stage and showing a filamentous distribution, were not found as prominently as cytokeratins 8 and 18. A-type as well as B-type lamins could be detected in all developmental stages examined, as a faintly reactive nuclear lamina. In blastocysts both lamin types were detected in trophoblast as well as in inner cell mass.  相似文献   

9.
During myogenesis the intermediate-sized filament (IF) cytoskeleton is characterized by increasing proportions of desmin. While skeletal and smooth muscle formation occurs in free mesenchymal cells containing vimentin-type IFs, myocardial development starts from a polar epithelium containing cytokeratin IFs and desmosomes. Therefore, we have studied the formation of the epicardium and the myocardium in different vertebrate species, combining light and electron microscopic immunolocalization techniques with gel-electrophoretic analyses of cytoskeletal proteins of microdissected myocardial tissue at differing developmental stages. In this report, we describe results obtained from advanced stages of myocardial differentiation. In all species studied the myocardial cell possess IFs abundant in desmin, often together with smaller amounts of vimentin, and the mesothelial layer of the epicardium contains cytokeratin IFs. However, we have observed remarkable interspecies differences with respect to the occurrence of cytokeratins in embryonic myocardial cells. In fetal human myocardium, from week 10 of pregnancy on, but not in juvenile and adult myocardium, and in chicken myocardium of all stages examined (until several days after hatching) specific immunostaining was seen with certain broad-range cytokeratin antibodies as well as with antibodies specific for cytokeratins 18 (in both species) and 8 (showing significant reaction only in human). This cytokeratin immunoreaction, however, did not appear in IFs extending throughout the cytoplasm or at Z-lines, but was localized in punctate arrays representing aggregates of dense material. The aggregates were often enriched at, but not restricted to, the desmosomal plaques of the intercalated discs. These observations were supported by gel-electrophoretic demonstration of small but significant amounts of cytokeratins 18 (in both species) and 8 (detected only in human) in microdissected myocardial tissue. We also observed cytokeratins in smooth muscle cells of some cardiac blood vessels. In contrast, bovine myocardium of advanced fetal age as well as rat and mouse myocardium (from fetal day 12 on) were negative for cytokeratins with all methods, although epicardial cytokeratin IFs were demonstrable. These observations are discussed in relation to myocardial histogenesis and to general problems of cytokeratin gene expression control in epithelial and nonepithelial cells.  相似文献   

10.
The expression of polysialic acid (PSA) and the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) during the embryonic development of rat kidney was investigated using immunocytochemistry and immunoblotting. A monoclonal antibody (mAb 735), which recognised only long chain PSA, and polyclonal antibodies specific for N-CAM were employed. At the earliest stages of metanephros formation, PSA and N-CAM immunostaining was found in both embryonic anlagen, namely the uretic bud and the metanephrogenic mesenchyme. Reactivity in uretic bud derivatives declined during embryonic development and was generally absent in the collecting duct system by embryonic day 18 (E18). Uninduced metanephrogenic mesenchyme was immunostained throughout development while induced mesenchymal cells showed greatly increased PSA and N-CAM immunoreactivity during their transformation into epithelium. This staining declined rapidly as nephrons differentiated. These processes were preceded by sorting of PSA and N-CAM to the basolateral plasma membrane. Similar N-CAM and PSA patterns were observed in mesonephros development. In adult kidney parenchyma both PSA and N-CAM were undetectable. Immunoblotting of samples of embryonic kidney with mAb 735 revealed a broad band ranging from 140 to greater than 200 x 10(3) Mr. N-CAM antibodies revealed reactivity in a band of 140 x 10(3) Mr after removal of PSA by endoneuraminidase treatment. Expression of N-CAM and PSA in both embryonic anlagen indicates that neither molecular species acts primarily as an inductive signal. These molecules were localised in areas where changes in cell adhesion during organogenesis might be important and thus may be involved in the grouping of developing cells.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Summary The expression patterns of individual cytokeratin polypeptides in foetal and adult human pancreatic tissues were examined using monoclonal antibodies. We demonstrated that human pancreatic epithelia in early stages of development (14 weeks of gestation) contain cytokeratins 7, 8, 18 and 19, which are typical of simple epithelia, as well as cytokeratin 4 and 17, which are characteristic of stratified epithelia. In the pancreatic ducts, most of these cytokeratins appeared to be expressed together. Cytokeratins 1, 5, 10, 13, 16 and 20 were not detectable. In contrast, the pancreatic parenchyma was only positive for cytokeratins 8 and 18, except a transient expression of cytokeratins 7 and 19 in pancreatic islets and acinar cells during the foetal development. A focal cytokeratin 7 staining of single acinar cells was seen in newborn and in adult islets. In the stromal tissue, vascular smooth muscle cells were partly reactive with cytokeratin 8 and 18 specific antibodies. The results are discussed in the light of differentiation-dependent changes in the expression of individual cytokeratin polypeptides in developing epithelia.  相似文献   

13.
The expression patterns of individual cytokeratin polypeptides in foetal and adult human pancreatic tissues were examined using monoclonal antibodies. We demonstrated that human pancreatic epithelia in early stages of development (14 weeks of gestation) contain cytokeratins 7, 8, 18 and 19, which are typical of simple epithelia, as well as cytokeratin 4 and 17, which are characteristic of stratified epithelia. In the pancreatic ducts, most of these cytokeratins appeared to be expressed together. Cytokeratins 1, 5, 10, 13, 16 and 20 were not detectable. In contrast, the pancreatic parenchyma was only positive for cytokeratins 8 and 18, except a transient expression of cytokeratins 7 and 19 in pancreatic islets and acinar cells during the foetal development. A focal cytokeratin 7 staining of single acinar cells was seen in newborn and in adult islets. In the stromal tissue, vascular smooth muscle cells were partly reactive with cytokeratin 8 and 18 specific antibodies. The results are discussed in the light of differentiation-dependent changes in the expression of individual cytokeratin polypeptides in developing epithelia.  相似文献   

14.
Liver development is based on reciprocal interactions between ventral foregut endoderm and adjacent mesenchymal tissues. Targeted disruption of the LIM-homeobox gene Lhx2 has revealed that it is important for the expansion of the liver during embryonic development, whereas it appears not to be involved in the induction of hepatic fate. It is not known whether Lhx2 is expressed in the endodermal or mesenchymal portion of the liver, or if the cells normally expressing Lhx2 are absent or present in the liver of Lhx2(-/-) embryos. To address this we have analyzed gene expression from the Lhx2 locus during hepatic development in wild type and Lhx2(-/-) mice. Lhx2 is expressed in cells of the septum transversum mesenchyme adjacent to the liver bud from embryonic day 9. The hepatic cords subsequently migrate into and intermingle with the Lhx2+ cells of the septum transversum mesenchyme. Lhx2 expression is thereafter maintained in a subpopulation of mesenchymal cells in the liver until adult life. In adult liver the Lhx2+ mesenchymal cells co-express desmin, a marker associated with stellate cells. At embryonic day 10.5, cells expressing the mutant Lhx2 allel are present in Lhx2(-/-) livers, and expression of Hlx, hepatocyte growth factor, Hex and Prox1, genes known to be important in liver development, is independent of functional Lhx2 expression. Thus, Lhx2 is specifically expressed in the liver-associated septum transversum mesenchyme that subsequently becomes an integral part of the liver and the formation of these mesenchymal cells does not require functional Lhx2.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The anatomical distribution of cytokeratins and vimentin was investigated by means of immunohistochemistry in the human epididymis. Epithelial cells of the ductuli efferentes and the corpus epididymidis were positive for cytokeratins and vimentin. The expression of epithelial vimentin decreased toward the cauda epididymidis, whereas cytokeratins remained unchanged. The epithelium of the ductus deferens was negative when antibodies against vimentin were used. With monoclonal antibodies to individual cytokeratins, the presence of cytokeratins 7, 8, 18, and 19 was demonstrated histochemically throughout the epithelium of the epididymis. Monoclonal antibodies specific for cytokeratin 17 allowed immunohistochemical differentiation between the ductuli efferentes and the ductus epididymidis.  相似文献   

16.
An experimental model was designed to analyze the effect of fetal gut mesenchyme on the cytodifferentiation of crypt cells and of embryonic progenitor cells. The cells used were the rat intestinal crypt cell line, IEC-17, and primary cell cultures prepared form isolated 14-day-old fetal intestinal endoderm (EC). Both cultures prepared from isolated 14-day-old fetal rat intestinal endoderm (EC). Both types of cells were associated with 14-day-old fetal rat gut mesenchyme (Rm) and grafted under the kidney capsule of adult rats. Seventy percent of the Rm/EC and ten percent of the Rm/IEC recombinants, recovered after 9 days, exhibited well-vascularized structures in which the mesenchyme had induced morphogenesis of the cells into a villus epithelium. The four main intestinal epithelial cell types, absorptive, goblet, endocrine, and Paneth cells, were identified using electron microscopy. Biochemical determinations of enzyme activities associated with brush border membranes revealed that alkaline phosphatase, lactase, sucrase, and maltase were expressed in both types of associations. These results were confirmed by immunofluorescence staining using monoclonal antibodies to brush border enzymes. Both enzyme assays and immunocytochemistry showed that the amount of enzymes present in the brush border membrane of Rm/IEC grafts was in general lower than that of the Rm/EC recombinants. The results indicate that fetal rat gut mesenchyme enables morphogenesis and cytodifferentiation of both crypt and embryonic progenitor cells.  相似文献   

17.
The epithelial versus mesenchymal phenotypes of embryonic ectoderm and mesoderm cells of the prestreak stage pig embryos were examined by electron microscopy and molecular marker analysis. During this period the embryonic disc remained flat or slightly convex while becoming oval or pyriform in shape. Mesenchyme cells expressing vimentin were present between the embryonic disc and the underlying visceral endoderm before a primitive streak (or groove) was apparent. The migration of mesenchyme appeared to occur in lateral and posterior directions from a mass of quiescent cells located in the pointed end of the pyriform embryonic disc that expressed Brachyury; these cells are proposed to be the precursors of the primitive streak and/or form the equivalent of the mouse early gastrula organizer (EGO). Cells with the TEC-1 (or SSEA-1) epitope, the marker most frequently used to characterize pluripotent cells, were initially distributed randomly in the embryonic ectoderm and then were found to localize in an anterior crescent which may contain the precursor cells of ectoderm and neurectoderm. As mitotic figures were found only in the anterior crescent, it is proposed that at least some of these proliferating cells migrate toward the EGO. While cytokeratins were barely detectable in the embryonic ectoderm cells, vimentin expression was supposed to be associated with the migratory capacity of these cells. These findings indicate that the early step of gastrulation, migration of extraembryonic mesoderm, occurs at a prestreak stage during which the embryonic disc becomes polarized. genesis 38:13-25, 2004.  相似文献   

18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1988,107(6):2341-2349
Tenascin, an extracellular matrix protein, is expressed in the mesenchyme around growing epithelia in the embryo. We therefore investigated whether epithelial cells can stimulate expression of tenascin in embryonic mesenchyme. Mesenchyme from the presumptive small intestine was used because it is known that reciprocal epithelial- mesenchymal interactions are important for gut morphogenesis. Rat monoclonal antibodies against mouse tenascin were raised and were found to react specifically with mouse tenascin in ELISA. In supernatants of cultured fibroblasts, the antibodies precipitated two peptides of Mr 260 and 210 kD. One of the antibodies also reacted with these tenascin chains in immunoblots of tissue extracts. We found that tenascin was absent during early stages of gut development, at stages when the mesenchyme is already in contact with the stratified epithelium of the endoderm. Rather, it appeared in the mesenchyme when the homogenous endodermal epithelium differentiated into the heterogenous absorptive epithelium. Tenascin remained present in the stroma of the adult gut, close to the migration pathways of the continuously renewing epithelium. When first detected during intestinal differentiation, the 210-kD component was predominant but at birth the relative amount of the 260-kD component had increased. The expression data suggested that the appearance of tenascin in the mesenchyme was dependent on the presence of epithelium. To test this, isolated gut mesenchymes from 13- d-old mouse embryos were cultured for 24 h either alone or together with epithelial and nonepithelial cells. Whereas mesenchyme cultured alone or in the presence of nonepithelial B16-F1 melanoma cells produced only trace amounts of tenascin, expression was strongly stimulated by the epithelial cell line, Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK). We propose that growing and differentiating epithelia produce locally active factors which stimulate synthesis of tenascin in the surrounding mesenchyme.  相似文献   

19.
Tissues of human testes, either normal (23 specimens of various developmental stages), or affected by pathological conditions (19 specimens of dystopia, atrophia and/or oligospermia) were immunohistochemically examined for the expression of different cytokeratins, using mainly frozen material. Cytokeratins 8 and 18 were found in varying amounts in Sertoli cells of fetal, prepubertal and senile testes and in all cases of pathological alteration. Cytokeratins were completely absent only in normal, mature seminiferous tubules. Therefore, the immunohistochemical detection of cytokeratins in Sertoli cells seems to provide a sensitive marker for immature or damaged testes.  相似文献   

20.
The endodermal epithelia of esophagus, proventriculus and gizzard of 6-day chicken embryos can form glands and express embryonic chicken pepsinogen (ECPg), when they are subjected to the influence of proventricular mesenchyme, while intestinal epithelium of the same age cannot respond to the inductive influence of proventricular mesenchyme. We attempted in this paper to know whether this regional difference of epithelia to respond to mesenchymal influence originates very early in development or it is established gradually in the course of development of digestive tract.
The young presumptive intestinal endoderm taken from embryos having 15–20 somites was associated and cultivated with 6-day proventricular mesenchyme. The presumptive intestinal endoderm never expressed ECPg although it formed gland-like structures. In the control explants composed of presumptive stomach endoderm and proventricular mesenchyme, glands were formed and gland cells expressed ECPg detected by immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization.
These results indicate that the developmental fate of presumptive intestinal endoderm is determined rather strictly at very early developmental stage, and suggest that the segregation of at least two cell lineages occurs early in the development; one which can express ECPg under the influence of proventricular mesenchyme, and another one which cannot express ECPg and differentiates mainly into intestinal epithelium.  相似文献   

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