Proximo-distal pattern regulation in deficient avian limb buds.

Wilehm Roux Arch Dev Biol

Laboratoire de Zoologie et Biologie animale, Equipe de Recherche associée au CNRS no 621, Université scientifique et médicale de Grenoble, Boîte postale no 53-Centre de Tri, F-38041, Grenoble-Cedex, France.

Published: September 1977

Deficient limb buds composed of prospective stylopod and autopod are able to regulate the missing intercalary zeugopod, the origin of which was investigated by heterospecific quail/chick recombinants. The associations of quail prospective autopod and chick prospective stylopod failed to regulate. The reverse combination of chick prospective autopod grafted onto a quail prospective stylopod gave rise to a three-segmented limb. In 13 out of 16 cases the regulated zeugopod was made up of both chick and quail cells. Chick cells were located predominantly along the postaxial half of the zeugopod, while the quail cells made up most of its preaxial half. In two cases, the intercalary zeugopod consisted exclusively of chick cells originating from the tip and in one case of quail cells originating from the base.These results demonstrate that during the regulative processes, the prospective values of some of the original stylopodial and autopodial cells have been shifted along the proximo-distal axis, towards the expression of more distal as well as of more proximal structures.Heteropolar stylo-autopodial or zeugo-autopodial recombinants, in which the proximo-distal axis of the base was reversed with respect to that of the tip, were unable to regulate the pattern defects and thus revealed the importance of concordant p-d polarity for regulative processes to take place between abutted tissues.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00867319DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

prospective stylopod
12
quail cells
12
limb buds
8
intercalary zeugopod
8
quail prospective
8
prospective autopod
8
chick prospective
8
chick cells
8
cells originating
8
regulative processes
8

Similar Publications

Specification of cell fate along the proximal-distal axis in the developing chick limb bud.

Development

April 2007

Department of Developmental Biology and Neurosciences, Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Aobayama, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8578, Japan.

Pattern formation along the proximal-distal (PD) axis in the developing limb bud serves as a good model for learning how cell fate and regionalization of domains, which are essential processes in morphogenesis during development, are specified by positional information. In the present study, detailed fate maps for the limb bud of the chick embryo were constructed in order to gain insights into how cell fate for future structures along the PD axis is specified and subdivided. Our fate map revealed that there is a large overlap between the prospective autopod and zeugopod in the distal limb bud at an early stage (stage 19), whereas a limb bud at this stage has already regionalized the proximal compartments for the prospective stylopod and zeugopod.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Control of digit formation by activin signalling.

Development

May 1999

Departamento de Anatomía y Biología Celular, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Cantabria, Santander 39011, Spain.

Major advances in the genetics of vertebrate limb development have been obtained in recent years. However, the nature of the signals which trigger differentiation of the mesoderm to form the limb skeleton remains elusive. Previously, we have obtained evidence for a role of TGFbeta2 in digit formation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hensen's node provides an endogenous limb-forming signal.

Dev Biol

August 1997

Department of Anatomy, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut 06030, USA.

Acquisition of limb-forming ability by discrete regions of the lateral plate of the chick embryo is thought to depend on a signaling cascade moving sequentially from the area of Hensen's node to the somitic mesoderm, the intermediate mesoderm, and then to the prospective limb-forming regions of the lateral plate (Stephens et al., 1991). In the present study it is demonstrated that grafts of Hensen's node can induce the formation of supernumerary rudimentary limbs from the non-limb-forming flank region of the lateral plate of stage 9-15 chick embryos.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Proximo-distal pattern regulation in deficient avian limb buds.

Wilehm Roux Arch Dev Biol

September 1977

Laboratoire de Zoologie et Biologie animale, Equipe de Recherche associée au CNRS no 621, Université scientifique et médicale de Grenoble, Boîte postale no 53-Centre de Tri, F-38041, Grenoble-Cedex, France.

Deficient limb buds composed of prospective stylopod and autopod are able to regulate the missing intercalary zeugopod, the origin of which was investigated by heterospecific quail/chick recombinants. The associations of quail prospective autopod and chick prospective stylopod failed to regulate. The reverse combination of chick prospective autopod grafted onto a quail prospective stylopod gave rise to a three-segmented limb.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The portion of the pre-axial region of the wing bud anterior to the cranial boundary of the skeletogenous territory of the stylo-zeugopod, according to Stark and Searls' recent maps, was surgically isolated in chicken embryos of the stages 18-25, and autoplastically grafted to the dorsal surface of the hind-limb bud or to the trunk. In other embryos of the same stages the cranial half or the cranial two thirds of the pre-axial region mentioned were isolated and heterotopically implanted. The experimental results consistently showed that the isolate contained a variously large portion of the presumptive radius and a significant part of the proximal half of the prospective humerus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!