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The location and synthesis of transferrin in mouse embryos and teratocarcinoma cells
Authors:E D Adamson
Affiliation:Cancer Research Center, La Jolla Cancer Research Foundation, 10901 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, California 92037 USA
Abstract:In early postimplantation mouse development, transferrin synthesis appears to be a marker of visceral endoderm cell types. Transferrin was identified using immunoperoxidase staining, in the proximal (visceral) endoderm of the sixth-day egg cylinder, in some tissues at later stages, and in the visceral yolk sac (VYS) at all stages examined. Since the location of a plasma protein does not necessarily indicate its site of synthesis, the incorporation of labeled amino acids into transferrin was studied. Synthesis could be detected in egg cylinders on the seventh day of gestation onwards and in the VYS at all stages. However, although endoderm was the likely tissue source, its ability to synthesize transferrin after its isolation from the embryo was either much reduced or absent. The data are suggestive of a modulating influence by mesoderm and other cell types on transferrin synthesis in visceral endoderm cells. Three types of endoderm-like cells which are produced by teratocarcinoma embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells were analyzed for transferrin synthesis to assess possible parallels with the embryo. Embryoid bodies from PSA1 EC cells contained some outer endoderm cells which stained for transferrin and others which did not. The endoderm line PSA5E but not PYS-2 synthesized transferrin. The third type of endoderm-like cell (END cells) synthesized very little (OC15S1) or no (PC13 clone 5) transferrin. The conclusion that PSA5E, OC15 END, and some differentiated PSA1 cells have visceral endoderm-like character while PYS-2 reflects parietal endoderm phenotype is in agreement with published data.
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