The mutual arrangement of neural and mesodermal rudiments in artificially bent double explants of Xenopus laevis suprablastoporal areas was compared with that of intact explants. While some of the bent explants straightened or became spherical, most retained and actively reinforced the imposed curvature, creating folds on their concave sides and expanding convex surfaces. In the intact explants, the arrangement of neural and mesodermal rudiments exhibited a distinct antero-posterior polarity, with some variability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfluence of the relaxation of mechanical tensions upon collective cell movements, shape formation, and expression patterns of tissue-specific genes has been studied in Xenopus laevis embryos. We show that the local relaxation of tensile stresses within the suprablastoporal area (SBA) performed at the early-midgastrula stage leads to a complete arrest of normal convergent cell intercalation towards the dorsal midline. As a result, SBA either remains nondeformed or protrudes a strip of cells migrating ventralwards along one of the lateral lips of the opened blastopore.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of cooperative cell movements has been explored in establishment of regular segregation of the marginal zone of Xenopus laevis embryos into the main axial rudiments: notochord, somites and neural tissue. For this purpose, the following operations were performed at the late blastula-early gastrula stages: (1) isolation of marginal zones, (2) addition of the ventral zone fragments to the marginal zones, (3) dissection of isolated marginal zones along either ventral (a) or dorsal (b) midlines, (4) immediate retransplantation of excised fragments of the suprablastoporal area to the same places without rotation or after 90 degrees rotation, (5) pi-shaped separation of the suprablastoporal area either anteriorly or posteriorly. In experiments 1, 4, and 5, lateromedial convergent cell movements and differentiation of the axial rudiments were suppressed.
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