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Time of origin of Mauthner's neuron in Xenopus laevis embryos
Authors:Pilar Vargas-Lizardi  Katherine M. Lyser
Affiliation:Hunter College of the City University of New York, New York 10021 USA
Abstract:The time of the last DNA replication of the Mauthner's neuron precursor cell has been investigated using radioautography. Embryos of Xenopus laevis were labeled at different stages of early development by single microinjections of tritiated thymidine. Labeling times were designed to cover the entire period of development between gastrula and hatching stages. The embryos were fixed at later stages (41 to 44, according to Nieuwkoop and Faber, 1967), when the Mauthner neuron can be readily distinguished by its characteristically large size and large nucleolus.Mauthner neurons of embryos which received tritiated thymidine from stage 10 (beginning of gastrulation) to stage 12 (advanced gastrula, medium yolk plug) were always labeled. Those embryos which received the isotope at or after stage 1212 (advanced gastrula, small yolk plug) were never found labeled. These results imply that the last DNA replication of the cell destined to give rise to the Mauthner neuron occurs during the last gastrula stages. This last DNA replication immediately proceeds the time of the so-called “histogenetic determination” of the Mauthner neuron proposed to correspond to stage 13 (slit blastopore) by Stefanelli (1951).Therefore it appears that the developmental program of the Mauthner neuron involves a remarkably early cessation of DNA replication closely followed by histogenetic determination. This is the earliest known event of this type for a specific, well characterized neuron in the amphibian embryo.
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