Abstract: | Mouse embryos at the 2-cell stage were cultured in the presence of cytochalasin B (CB), cytochalasin D (CD), colchicine (COL) or colcemid (COM) for up to 72 h. Cleavage was arrested in the 2-cell and 8-cell embryos cultured in CB or CD but the blastomeres continued to differentiate, since chromosome replication occurred in the blastomeres at approximately the same time as control embryos underwent cleavage; an increase in the incorporation of [3H]uridine into RNA was also detected. Furthermore, the cleavage-arrested embryos acquired the necessary information to undergo morphogenesis; these embryos when explanted to fresh medium after 48 h culture in CB or CD underwent compaction within 15–60 min and started to cavitate to produce trophoblastic vesicles within 5–6 h at the same time as when the control embryos were undergoing compaction and beginning to form blastocoelic cavities. In contrast, the embryos arrested in the presence of COM or COL showed none of these differentiative, biochemical or morphogenetic changes. Hence, differentiation of blastomeres and morphogenesis is apparently coupled with nuclear divisions and the information does not reside within the blastomeres at the 2-cell or 8-cell stage. The trophoblastic vesicles produced after cleavage arrest subsequently gave rise to only trophoblast giant cells and no embryonic derivatives were detected. |