Formation of the Neural Plate and the Mesoderm in Normally Developing Embryos of Xenopus laevis |
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Authors: | HIROSHI IMOH |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology, Miyazaki University, Funatsuka 1-1, Miyazaki 880, Japan |
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Abstract: | Normally developing embryos of Xenopus were fixed at various stages between the blastula and early tail bud stage, and their serial sections were examined. The marginal belt of the blastula was characterized by abundance of cells with RNA-rich peripheral cytoplasm called mesoplasm. At the early gastrula stage, the marginal belt was folded into two layers giving rise to mesodermal material and marginal ectoderm. During gastrulation, the mesodermal material, which consisted of RNA-rich cells, spread to enclose the blastocoel and the endoderm, and a large part of it was shifted to the dorsal side of the embryo. It gradually established the mesodermal layer. The notochord was formed on the dorsal lip of the blastopore by involution, separately from preformed mesodermal material. The RNA-rich cells in the marginal ectoderm became columnar, forming a broad belt in the marginal zone. This belt was deformed and shifted to the dorsal side during gastrulation, eventually establishing the neural plate showing quantitative differentiation along the head-tail axis. Possible mechanisms involved in the formation of the neural plate and mesoderm were discussed with reference to the organizer and the mesoplasm. |
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