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1.
We examined the spatial relationships between the meridian of sperm entry the plane of first cleavage, and the embryonic axis (defined by the neural groove) in eggs of Xenopus laevis. Direct measurement of the angular separations between these embryonic structures in gelatin-embedded eggs confirmed the classical conclusion that the sperm entry point and neural groove tend to form on opposite sides of the egg, and also revealed that the first cleavage plane has a nearly random orientation with respect to the neural groove. We next examined the distortion of the first cleavage plane that results from the normal processes of convergence and extension during gastrulation and neurulation. We permanently marked the first cleavage plane by injecting one blastomere of the two-cell embryo with a fluorescent lineage marker. At the start of gastrulation, the interface between the labeled and unlabeled regions was almost randomly oriented relative to the dorsal blastopore lip, confirming our first set of observations. In embryos with the interface less than 60 degrees to the plane passing through the midline of the dorsal lip, convergent movements of cells produced a confrontation of labeled and unlabeled cells along much of the dorsal midline. Thus, although the first cleavage plane and the bilateral plane were frequently not congruent, the morphogenetic movements of gastrulation and neurulation brought about an apparent congruence in many half-labeled embryos.  相似文献   

2.
The sperm entry position (SEP) of the mouse egg, labelled by placing a bead at the fertilisation cone, tends to be associated with the first cleavage plane (Piotrowska and Zernicka-Goetz: Nature 409:517-521, 2001). Nevertheless, in up to one-fourth of embryos the cleavage furrow did not pass close to the bead, and following the division the bead marked the cleavage plane in only 60% of cases. This raised the question of whether such variability arose from the labelling itself or had a biological basis. The zona pellucida was not responsible for this effect because similar results were obtained in its presence or absence. However, this variability could be attributable to the large size of the fertilisation cone relative to the SEP. Therefore, we have developed a means of fluorescently labelling sperm that can record the exact site of its penetration when the label transfers to the egg surface. This approach indicates that the SEP marks the first cleavage in the great majority (88%) of embryos. In conclusion, direct sperm labelling shows precisely the correlation between the SEP and the first cleavage, although there is natural variability in this process.  相似文献   

3.
4.
In the first cleavage of the egg of the newt, Cynops(Triturus) pyrrhogaster, some sort of preparation for the furrow formation in the cortical and subcortical cytoplasm precedes the advancing tip of the cleavage furrow. This is shown by the following facts: (1) Incisions made close to the tip of the cleavage furrow do not stop the progress of furrowing, allowing the furrow to cross the incisions and appear on the farther sides, while incisions made far enough from the furrow tip always prevent the further travelling of the furrow, (2) Displacement of the subcortical cytoplasm ahead of the furrow by rubbing with a hair loop makes the furrow bend corresponding to the width of the rubbed area, and (3) Transplantation of the subcortical material of the furrow tip to lateral parts in the same egg causes a depression in the overlying cortex at the transplanted position. The linear extension of the prepared area for the furrow formation is the longest in the animal hemisphere and it decreases in gradient towards the vegetal pole.  相似文献   

5.
The second polar body (Pb) provides an enduring marker of the animal pole of the zygote, thereby revealing that the axis of bilateral symmetry of the early blastocyst is aligned with the zygote's animal-vegetal axis. That this relationship is biologically significant appeared likely when subsequent studies showed that the equator of the blastocyst tended to correspond with the plane of first cleavage. However, this cleavage plane varies both with respect to the position of the second Pb and to the distribution of components of the fertilizing sperm that continue to mark the point where it entered the egg. It also maps too variably on the blastocyst to play a causal role in early patterning. The zygote has been found transiently to exhibit bilateral symmetry before regaining an essentially spherical shape prior to first cleavage. Marking experiments indicate that the plane of bilateral symmetry of the blastocyst is aligned with, and the plane of first cleavage is typically orthogonal to, the zygote's bilateral plane. The bilateral symmetry of the zygote bears no consistent relationship either to the point of sperm entry or to the distribution of the pronuclei, and may therefore be a manifestation of intrinsic organization of the egg. Finally, the two-cell blastomere inheriting the sperm entry point has not been found to differ consistently in fate from the one that does not.  相似文献   

6.
The external features of a shortened, apluteal development (lacking a pluteus larva) are described. Some features are unusual for echinoids. The large egg is distinctively marked by dark and pale coloured yolk. The sperm entry point is marked by a dark yolk spot and the first cleavage plane in most embryos is through the meridian on which the sperm entry point lies. Dark yolk in the animal hemisphere segregates largely to one blastomere in the two-cell embryo and pale yolk segregates to the other as a result of yolk movements during the first cell cycle. Progeny of the pale-yolk blastomere form adult oral structures and progeny of the dark-yolk blastomere form adult aboral structures. There is no feeding planktonic pluteus larva. The gastrula develops into a demersal vestibula larva with bilateral symmetry. The plane of symmetry is coincident with the Carpenter axis that defines a plane of symmetry through the madreporite in adult echinoderms. The coincidence shows that the anterior ambulacrum is vegetal with respect to egg polarity and the interradius originating at the madreporite is animal. The bilateral symmetry of the vestibula offers insight into the origin of radial symmetry in echinoderms and the body plan of an echinoderm ancestor.  相似文献   

7.
Experiments were performed to determine whether the first cleavage division plays a role in setting up the dorsoventral axis in embryos of the equal-cleaving nemerteanCerebratulus lacteus.Fertilized eggs were compressed to change the orientation of the first cleavage spindle, and thus the plane of the first cleavage division. One cell of the resulting two-celled embryos was then injected with lineage tracer to determine whether the first cleavage plane always maintains its normal relationships to the median and frontal planes or whether new relationships (and thus, novel cell lineages) could be created. Many of these compressed embryos gave rise to normal-appearing pilidium larvae in which the first cleavage plane had taken on various oblique angular relationships relative to the plane of bilateral symmetry and the dorsoventral axis of the larva. These findings indicate that the first cleavage plane can be dissociated from its normal relationships to these axial properties. Thus, the first cleavage division is not causally involved in the establishment of the dorsoventral and bilateral axes. We argue that the dorsoventral axis is specified prior to the first cleavage division.  相似文献   

8.
In Xenopus laevis, the dorsal structures normally develop from regions of the egg opposite the side of sperm entry. Gravity is known to affect this topographic relationship in eggs inclined obliquely from their normal vertical orientation in the period before first cleavage. This effect has been explored in detail, making use of low-speed centrifugation (10-50 g) for short durations (4 min). Eggs were immobilized in gelatin and oriented with their animal-vegetal axes 90 degrees to the force vector, with the sperm entry point (SEP) side of the egg either toward or away from the center of the rotor. It has been found that the egg shows three distinct periods of response to centrifugal force in the interval from fertilization to first cleavage: Prior to 0.4 (40% of the first cleavage interval), the egg is very sensitive to centrifugal force and develops dorsal structures from its centrifugal side, regardless of the position of the SEP in the centrifugal field. Thus, the dorsal structures of the embryo are reversed from normal in eggs centrifuged with the SEP away from the center of the rotor. In the period 0.4 to 0.7, the egg is still very sensitive to centrifugal force and develops dorsal structures from its centripetal side, regardless of the position of the SEP in the centrifugal field. Thus, the dorsal structures of the embryo are reversed from normal in eggs centrifuged with the SEP toward the center of the rotor. In the period 0.7-1.0, the egg becomes increasingly resistant to centrifugal force and forms dorsal structures at the normal position opposite the SEP side. This resistance can be overcome in some egg clutches by 50 g centrifugation followed by prolonged 90 degrees off-axis inclination at 1g. Midway in the second cell cycle, there is a brief period of sensitivity to centrifugal force. These These results are discussed in terms of the types of cytoplasmic rearrangements occurring in the egg at different times of the cell cycle, and in terms of the process of cytoplasmic localization of determinants of dorsal axial development.  相似文献   

9.
From Cynops pyrrhogaster eggs just after the start of the first cleavage, a fragment of cortical layer with a small entire cleavage furrow was cut out. In the fragment, the cortex had already acquired susceptibility to and the subcortical cytoplasm had already accquired inducibility for furrow formation. The fragment was transplanted to the animal hemisphere of uncleaved fertilized eggs or eggs immediately after the onset of the first cleavage, from which a portion of the host cortex was removed. Observation was made on division of the graft, and on propagation of the cortical susceptibility and the cytoplasmic inducibility of the graft onto the host egg. The transplant divided succesively on the host egg in many cases, but the furrow of the graft never advanced to the surface of the host egg. Neither the cortical factor nor the cytoplasmic factor was transmitted across the graft to the recipient egg.  相似文献   

10.
We describe an embryonic lethal mutation in Xenopus laevis that provokes regression of cleavage furrow formation. The mutant females (designated as af) were obtained by the back-cross of a female with one of her sons. All the fertilized eggs laid by the mutant females, regardless of the wild-type male used in the mating, failed to cleave although each furrow ran at a proper position superficially. Light and electron microscopic observations of the embryos revealed that the cleavage furrows stayed on the surface and cytoplasmic divisions did not take place at all, while nuclear divisions did. Two-dimensional gel-electrophoretic comparisons of af and wild-type embryos demonstrated that two proteins, having estimated molecular masses of about 38 kDa (pI 6.6) and 78 kDa (pI 7.6), were missing in af embryos. Microinjection of clear cytoplasm from a wild-type egg into fertilized af eggs provoked partial surface contraction and cleavage furrow formation in recipient af eggs. The results showed that the af females carry a lethal maternal-effect mutation which causes cleavage furrow regression by being deficient in a few proteins, and that cytoplasm of wild-type eggs can partially rescue the cleavage furrow formation of af eggs by furnishing the corrective material, presumably a product of the normal allele of af.  相似文献   

11.
The process of embryogenesis is described for the inarticulate brachiopod Discinisca strigata of the family Discinidae. A fate map has been constructed for the early embryo. The animal half of the egg forms the dorsal ectoderm of the apical and mantle lobes. The vegetal half forms mesoderm and endoderm and is the site of gastrulation; it also forms the ectoderm of the ventral regions of the apical and mantle lobes of the larva. The plane of the first cleavage goes through the animal-vegetal axis of the egg along the future plane of bilateral symmetry of the larva. The timing of regional specification in these embryos was examined by isolating animal, vegetal, or lateral regions at different times from the 2-cell stage through gastrulation. Animal halves isolated at the 8-cell and blastula stages formed an epithelial vesicle and did not gastrulate. When these halves were isolated from blastulae they formed the cell types typical of apical and mantle lobes. Vegetal halves isolated at all stages gastrulated and formed a more or less normal larva; the only defect these larvae had was the lack of an apical tuft, which normally forms from cells at the animal pole of the embryo. When lateral isolates were created at all developmental stages, these halves gastrulated. Cuts which separated presumptive anterior and posterior regions generated isolates at the 4-cell and blastula stages that formed essentially normal larvae; however, at the midgastrula stage these halves formed primarily anterior or posterior structures indicating that regional specification had taken place along the anterior-posterior axis. The plane of the first cleavage, which predicts the plane of bilateral symmetry, can be shifted by either changing the cleavage pattern that generates the bilateral 16-cell blastomere configuration or by isolating embryo halves prior to, or during, the 16-cell stage. These results indicate that while the plane of the first cleavage predicts the axis of bilateral symmetry, the axis is not established until the fourth cleavage. The development of Discinisca is compared to development in the inarticulate brachiopod Glottidia of the family Lingulidae and to Phoronis in the phylum Phoronida.  相似文献   

12.
The amphibian egg undergoes a rotation of its subcortical cytoplasm relative to its surface during the first cell cycle. Nile blue spots applied to the egg periphery move with the subcortical cytoplasm and make rotation directly observable (J.-P. Vincent, G.F. Oster, and J. C. Gerhart (1986). Dev. Biol. 113, 484). We have previously shown that the direction of rotation accurately predicts the orientation of the embryonic axis developed by the egg. This suggests an important role for subcortical rotation in axis specification. In this report, we provide two kinds of experimental evidence for the essential role of rotation, and against a role for other concurrent cytoplasmic movements such as the convergence of subcortical cytoplasm toward the sperm entry point in the animal hemisphere. First, dispermic eggs develop only one embryonic axis, which is oriented accurately in line with the direction of the single rotation movement and not with the two convergence foci that form in the animal hemisphere. Rotation probably modifies the vegetal, not animal, hemisphere since axial development is normal in dispermic eggs despite highly altered animal subcortical movement. Second, we show that the amount of rotation correlates with the extent of dorsal development. UV irradiation of the vegetal hemisphere, or cold shock of the egg, inhibits rotation effectively. When there is no rotation, there is no dorsal development. On average within the egg population, increasing amounts of rotation correlate with the increasingly anterior limit of the dorsal structures of the embryonic body axis. However, individual partially inhibited eggs vary greatly in the amount of axis formed following a given amount of movement. Furthermore, the egg normally rotates more than is necessary for the development of a complete axis. These findings suggest that rotation, although essential, does not directly pattern the antero-posterior dimension of the body axis, but triggers a response system which varies from egg to egg in its sensitivity to rotation. This system is artificially sensitized by exposure of the egg to D2O shortly before rotation. We show that D2O-treated eggs produce extensive axes despite very limited rotation, often developing into hyperdorsal embryos. However, like normal eggs, they depend on rotation and cannot form dorsal structures if it is eliminated.  相似文献   

13.
To determine whether gravity influences the plane of bilateral symmetry in medaka embryos, zygotes were placed with their animal-vegetal axis orientated vertically and with their vegetal pole elevated. Then, at regular intervals during the first cell cycle, the zygotes were tilted 90° for about 10 min and subsequently returned to their original orientation. In embryos tilted during the first half of the first cell cycle, the embryonic shield formed on the side that had been lowermost when the zygote was tilted. In embryos that were tilted twice, first in one direction and then in the opposite direction, the embryonic shield formed on the side that was lowermost the first time. When zygotes were centrifuged at 5 g , the embryonic shield formed on the outwardly radial (centrifugal) side of the embryo. The orientation of the array of parallel microtubules in the vegetal pole region was also influenced by tilting or centrifuging zygotes. No correlation was found between the positions of the polar body and the micropyle and the plane of bilateral symmetry. It was concluded that gravity influences both the plane of bilateral symmetry and the orientation of microtubules in the vegetal pole region of medaka embryos.  相似文献   

14.
1. The development of the amphiaster is associated with the formation of two semisolid masses within the more fluid egg substance. 2. The elongation of the egg during cleavage is possibly produced as a consequence of the mutual pressure of these two growing semisolid masses. 3. The division of the egg into two blastomeres consists essentially in a growth, within the egg, of two masses of material at the expense of the surrounding cytoplasm. When all the cytoplasm of the egg is incorporated in these two masses cleavage occurs. 4. After a certain period of time the semisolid masses revert to a more fluid state. In the eggs studied this normally occurs after the cleavage furrow has completed the separation of the two blastomeres. The formation of the furrow, however, may be prevented in various ways, upon which the egg reverts to a single spherical semifluid mass containing two nuclei. 5. An egg mutilated during its semisolid state (amphiaster stage) may or may not revert to a more fluid state. If the more solid state is maintained, the cleavage furrow persists and proceeds till cleavage is completed. If the mutilation causes the egg to revert to the more fluid state the furrow becomes obliterated and a new cleavage plane is subsequently adopted. 6. The nuclei of eggs in the semifluid state are able to alter their positions. In semifluid mutilated eggs the nuclei tend to move to positions which may assure symmetry in aster formation and cleavage.  相似文献   

15.
Deep cytoplasmic rearrangements during early development in Xenopus laevis   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The egg of the frog Xenopus is cylindrically symmetrical about its animal-vegetal axis before fertilization. Midway through the first cell cycle, the yolky subcortical cytoplasm rotates 30 degrees relative to the cortex and plasma membrane, usually toward the side of the sperm entry point. Dorsal embryonic structures always develop on the side away from which the cytoplasm moves. Details of the deep cytoplasmic movements associated with the cortical rotation were studied in eggs vitally stained during oogenesis with a yolk platelet-specific fluorescent dye. During the first cell cycle, eggs labelled in this way develop a complicated swirl of cytoplasm in the animal hemisphere. This pattern is most prominent on the side away from which the vegetal yolk moves, and thus correlates in position with the prospective dorsal side of the embryo. Although the pattern is initially most evident near the egg's equator or marginal zone, extensive rearrangements associated with cleavage furrowing (cytoplasmic ingression) relocate portions of the swirl to vegetal blastomeres on the prospective dorsal side.  相似文献   

16.
The first cleavage in the freshwater oligochaete Tubifex hattai is unequal and meridional, and produces a smaller cell AB and a larger cell CD. This study traces the process of furrow formation, reorganization of cortical F-actin and the assembly of a mitotic apparatus during this unequal division. Cleavage furrow formation consists of two stages: (i) when eggs are viewed from the animal pole, meridionally running furrows emerge at two points of the egg's equator that are 90° apart from each other and approach the egg axis as they deepen; and (ii) at the midpoint between the equator and the egg center, the bottoms of these furrows link to each other on the animal and vegetal surfaces of the egg and form a continuous ring of constriction in a plane parallel to the egg axis. Egg cortices, isolated during the first step and stained with rhodamine-phalloidin, show that the bottoms of recently formed furrows are underlaid by a belt of tightly packed actin bundles (i.e. a contractile arc). The transition to the second stage of furrow formation coincides with the conversion of these actin belts into a continuous ring of F-actin. Whole-mount immunocytochemistry of microtubules reveals that the first cleavage in Tubifex involves an asymmetric mitotic spindle, which initially possesses an aster at one pole but not the other. This ‘monastral’ spindle is located at the egg's center and orients itself perpendicular to the egg axis. During anaphase, astral rays elongate to reach the cell surface, so that the array of astral microtubules in the plane of the egg's equator covers a sector of 270–300°. In contrast, it is not until the transition to telophase that microtubules emanating from the anastral spindle pole approach the cell margin. If eggs are compressed along the egg axis or forced to elongate, they form monastral spindles and divide unequally. In living compressed eggs, mitotic spindles, which are recognizable as bright streaks at the egg's center, appear not to shift their position along the spindle axis during division, suggesting that without eccentric migration of spindles Tubifex eggs are able to divide unequally. These results suggest that mechanisms that translocate the mitotic spindle eccentrically do not operate in Tubifex eggs during the first cell cycle. The mechanisms that generate asymmetry in spindle organization are discussed in the light of the present results.  相似文献   

17.
18.
We have found ways to control in vitro fertilization in a ctenophore (Beroe ovata) for the first time. This is based on the existence of a partial block to self-fertilization at the time of gamete release which can be overcome by removal of the egg envelope. It has allowed us to exploit the excellent optical properties of Beroe eggs to make detailed observations on all events from sperm penetration or penetrations in these physiologically polyspermic eggs to first cleavage, and to extend our initial observations (Carré and Sardet, 1984). Sperm entry is characterized by local modifications of the egg cortex in a 70-microns zone around the penetration site or sites. Upon sperm entry, the egg surface contracts and relaxes locally, then a fertilization cone forms and disappears. These events are accompanied by localized exocytosis, growth of a ring of microvilli, thickening of the egg cortex, and gathering of mitochondria around the sperm pronuclei. The female pronucleus then migrates beneath the egg surface toward one or successive sperm pronuclei. The fusion of pronuclei, sperm and egg chromatin intermixing, and mitosis were also observed with exceptional clarity. Furthermore, we have noticed that the direction of the last trajectory of the female pronucleus tends to define the orientation of the mitotic spindle, and as a consequence the position of first unipolar cleavage furrow. This in turn determines the future sagittal plane of the embryo and of the adult B. ovata.  相似文献   

19.
This paper aims at examining the effect of colchicine, a microtubular poison, on the process of furrow formation in whole eggs and egg fragments as well as the process of artificial induction of furrow-like dents, in eggs of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster. To apply colchicine locally to eggs, the eggs were slit across or along a furrow in a colchicine solution during first cleavage. When a slit was made across or in front of a growing furrow at the onset of its growth, the furrow quickly ceased growing and often regressed. Cortices containing an entire growing furrow were isolated along with a thin layer of subcortical cytoplasm immediately after the start of the first cleavage. Furrows in the cortices degenerated when the cortices were cultured in a colchicine solution, whereas they continued growing when they were cultured in Holtfreter's saline. Furrow-inducing cytoplasm was injected to a site beneath the cortex in the animal half of the egg during first cleavage. When a small slit was made close to the site of the injection in a colchicine solution, no furrow-like dent was induced. These results imply that microtubules are directly involved in the generation and growth of cleavage furrows.  相似文献   

20.
Eggs of Triturus alpestris were horizontally compressed at times before first and second cleavage in an experiment designed to measure the time at which the mitotic apparatus determines the direction of the subsequent cleavage furrow. The results showed that furrow determination was completed 0.46 Dettlaff units before the onset of furrowing. When a comparison was made of the times of furrow determination before cleavage in eggs of different animal groups using Dettlaff units, the results supported the idea that preparations for furrowing proceed differently in echinoderm eggs from eggs of sturgeon and amphibia.  相似文献   

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