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2.
Mol Psychiatry ; 21(11): 1561-1572, 2016 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26754951

RÉSUMÉ

Disrupted-in-schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) is a mental illness gene first identified in a Scottish pedigree. So far, DISC1-dependent phenotypes in animal models have been confined to expressing mutant DISC1. Here we investigated how pathology of full-length DISC1 protein could be a major mechanism in sporadic mental illness. We demonstrate that a novel transgenic rat model, modestly overexpressing the full-length DISC1 transgene, showed phenotypes consistent with a significant role of DISC1 misassembly in mental illness. The tgDISC1 rat displayed mainly perinuclear DISC1 aggregates in neurons. Furthermore, the tgDISC1 rat showed a robust signature of behavioral phenotypes that includes amphetamine supersensitivity, hyperexploratory behavior and rotarod deficits, all pointing to changes in dopamine (DA) neurotransmission. To understand the etiology of the behavioral deficits, we undertook a series of molecular studies in the dorsal striatum of tgDISC1 rats. We observed an 80% increase in high-affinity DA D2 receptors, an increased translocation of the dopamine transporter to the plasma membrane and a corresponding increase in DA inflow as observed by cyclic voltammetry. A reciprocal relationship between DISC1 protein assembly and DA homeostasis was corroborated by in vitro studies. Elevated cytosolic dopamine caused an increase in DISC1 multimerization, insolubility and complexing with the dopamine transporter, suggesting a physiological mechanism linking DISC1 assembly and dopamine homeostasis. DISC1 protein pathology and its interaction with dopamine homeostasis is a novel cellular mechanism that is relevant for behavioral control and may have a role in mental illness.


Sujet(s)
Dopamine/métabolisme , Protéines de tissu nerveux/métabolisme , Amfétamine , Animaux , Comportement animal/physiologie , Encéphale/métabolisme , Modèles animaux de maladie humaine , Transporteurs de la dopamine/génétique , Homéostasie/physiologie , Humains , Mâle , Souris , Souris de lignée C57BL , Souris transgéniques , Protéines de tissu nerveux/génétique , Neurones/métabolisme , Rats , Rat Sprague-Dawley , Rats transgéniques , Récepteur D2 de la dopamine/métabolisme , Schizophrénie/génétique , Transmission synaptique
3.
Dev Dyn ; 213(1): 39-49, 1998 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9733099

RÉSUMÉ

The purpose of this study was to make an explicit test of the idea that a retinoid could act as a morphogen, differentially activating genes and specifying anteroposterior (a-p) level in the developing vertebrate central nervous system (CNS). Our approach was to characterize the concentration-dependent effects of retinoic acid (RA) on the neural expression of a set of a-p patterning genes, both in vivo and in an in vitro system for neural patterning. Our results indicate that a retinoid is unlikely to specify a-p level along the entire CNS. Instead, our data support the idea that the developing hindbrain may be patterned by a retinoid gradient. Sequentially more posterior hindbrain patterning genes were induced effectively by sequentially higher RA concentration windows. The most posterior CNS level induced under our RA treatment conditions corresponded to the most posterior part of the hindbrain.


Sujet(s)
Rhombencéphale/métabolisme , Trétinoïne/métabolisme , Animaux , Régulation de l'expression des gènes au cours du développement/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Protéines à homéodomaine/génétique , Modèles biologiques , Rhombencéphale/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Rhombencéphale/embryologie , Trétinoïne/pharmacologie , Xenopus
5.
Cell Mol Life Sci ; 53(4): 339-49, 1997 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9137625

RÉSUMÉ

There are many indications that active retinoids are regulatory signals during vertebrate embryogenesis. Treating vertebrate embryos with retinoids can cause teratogenic defects, including specific derangements of the main body axis. Other data show that early vertebrate embryos contain physiologically relevant concentrations of active retinoids and express retinoid binding proteins and receptors; that knockouts of retinoid receptors can induce homeotic defects; and that relevant developmental control genes are regulated by retinoid response elements. Here, we discuss the possibility that retinoids are developmental signals which regulate axial patterning in the early vertebrate embryo.


Sujet(s)
Plan d'organisation du corps , Rétinoïdes/métabolisme , Xenopus laevis/embryologie , Animaux , Plan d'organisation du corps/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Protéines à homéodomaine/physiologie , Récepteurs à l'acide rétinoïque/physiologie , Rétinoïdes/pharmacologie , Tératogènes/pharmacologie , Vertébrés/embryologie
6.
Int J Dev Biol ; 41(1): 57-65, 1997 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9074938

RÉSUMÉ

We have examined the role of FGFs in neural induction and posteriorization of the central nervous system (CNS). Using embryos micro-injected with dominant negative FGF receptor RNA (XFD), we show that a patterned CNS can still develop following inhibition of FGF signaling. The most severely affected embryos developed with strong posterior defects. In these embryos, head development and expression of a marker of forebrain and midbrain, and of markers of the hindbrain, occurred relatively normally. However, the expression levels of a posterior marker, Hoxb-9, were considerably reduced compared to those in control embryos. The results support the idea that FGFs are involved in inducing posterior development, but they suggest that other signals are also necessary for antero-posterior patterning of the primary body axis.


Sujet(s)
Système nerveux central/embryologie , Récepteur facteur croissance fibroblaste/physiologie , Animaux , Hybridation in situ , Mésoderme/cytologie , Microinjections , Morphogenèse , ARN messager/administration et posologie , Transduction du signal , Xenopus laevis/embryologie
7.
Mech Dev ; 54(2): 173-84, 1996 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8652410

RÉSUMÉ

COUP-TFs (Chicken Ovalbumin Upstream Promoter Transcription Factors) have been proposed to be negative regulators of retinoid receptor-mediated transcriptional activation. In a previous paper we reported the cloning of a Xenopus (x) COUP-TF (Matharu, P.J. and Sweeney, G.E. (1992) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1129, 331-334). Here we describe the cloning of a second xCOUP-TF. Amino acid sequence comparison between these two Xenopus COUP-TFs revealed a high level of similarity. Extensive amino acid sequence conservation was found among all Drosophila, Xenopus, zebrafish and mammalian COUP-TF genes examined. Phylogenetic tree analyses indicate that the vertebrate COUP-TFs fall into three classes. The two Xenopus COUP-TF genes show similar temporal expression patterns: both are expressed from the end of gastrulation. In situ hybridization studies reveal complex expression patterns in the developing central nervous system (CNS), besides expression in the eye and in some mesodermal tissues. Retinoic acid (RA) treatment enhances xCOUP-TF-A expression in neurula stage embryos, whereas the expression of xCOUP-TF-B is inhibited during the same developmental period. The strictly conserved amino acid sequences and the strong similarities between the expression patterns of the two different xCOUP-TFs on the one hand, and other vertebrate COUP-TF homologues on the other, make it likely that COUP-TFs have a conserved role in patterning the nervous system.


Sujet(s)
Protéines de liaison à l'ADN/génétique , Régulation de l'expression des gènes au cours du développement/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Facteurs de transcription/génétique , Trétinoïne/pharmacologie , Séquence d'acides aminés , Animaux , Facteur de transcription COUP-TFI , Clonage moléculaire , ADN complémentaire , Humains , Données de séquences moléculaires , Phylogenèse , Rhombencéphale/métabolisme , Spécificité d'espèce , Facteurs temps , Xenopus/génétique
8.
Dev Biol ; 151(2): 506-15, 1992 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1601182

RÉSUMÉ

Single cells from the animal cap and marginal zone (MZ) of mid-blastula stage embryos can undergo mesodermal or ectodermal differentiation as small clones under defined conditions in culture. Here we report that cells treated with Xenopus basic fibroblast growth factor (XbFGF), a mesoderm-inducing factor, usually differentiated into muscle. MZ cells, which normally give rise to most of the mesoderm, responded to lower concentrations of XbFGF than animal pole (AP) presumptive ectoderm cells. This difference in sensitivity correlated with immunocytochemical staining patterns that showed much greater levels of endogenous bFGF within MZ than AP cells in early embryos. At the mid-late blastula stage, nuclei of MZ cells were strongly immunoreactive. Nuclear staining persisted during gastrula and neurula stages, and extracellular bFGF also became apparent. Subsequently in somites, immunoreactivity of nuclei declined while that of the extracellular matrix was retained during tailbud stages. Nuclear localization of bFGF appeared to be temporally correlated with new transcription of muscle-specific genes, and extracellular bFGF was present during morphological differentiation. The results suggest that a cell's competence for mesoderm induction is related to its position in the embryo.


Sujet(s)
Blastocyste/composition chimique , Facteur de croissance fibroblastique de type 2/métabolisme , Mésoderme/physiologie , Xenopus/embryologie , Animaux , Blastocyste/physiologie , Différenciation cellulaire , Cellules cultivées , Embryon non mammalien/composition chimique , Facteur de croissance fibroblastique de type 2/physiologie , Immunohistochimie , Mésoderme/composition chimique , Mésoderme/cytologie
9.
Development ; 113(2): 487-93, 1991 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1723679

RÉSUMÉ

Mesoderm induction, the earliest inductive cell-cell interaction in vertebrate embryogenesis, is thought to be mediated by polypeptide growth factors including fibroblast growth factor (FGF). Here we present an immunocytochemical analysis of FGF during mesoderm induction in Xenopus laevis. Antibodies to both basic and acidic FGF were immunoreactive with oocytes and early embryos. Immunostaining was predominantly intracellular and was concentrated in the marginal zone and vegetal pole throughout cleavage and blastula stages. In addition, basic FGF (bFGF) antibodies showed intense nuclear staining in these regions, at and following the mid-blastula transition, when embryonic transcription begins. Acidic FGF (aFGF) also appeared in some nuclei at these stages. Taken together the evidence suggests that FGF is prepositioned in mesoderm-forming regions and is actively involved in mesoderm induction in vivo.


Sujet(s)
Noyau de la cellule/composition chimique , Induction embryonnaire/physiologie , Facteurs de croissance fibroblastique/analyse , Mésoderme/composition chimique , Xenopus laevis/embryologie , Animaux , Blastocyste/composition chimique , Technique de Western , Stade de la segmentation de l'oeuf/composition chimique , Cytoplasme/composition chimique , Facteur de croissance fibroblastique de type 1/analyse , Facteur de croissance fibroblastique de type 2/analyse , Gastrula/composition chimique , Immunohistochimie , Ovocytes/composition chimique
10.
Development ; 111(2): 523-30, 1991 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1893872

RÉSUMÉ

We have examined the developmental specification of individual cells in the Xenopus blastula using a new in vitro culture system. Regional differences are apparent at the mid-blastula stage when animal hemisphere cells form only ectodermal cell types, while many clones from below the pigment boundary contain mesodermal cell types. A number of clones give rise to more than one differentiated cell type indicating that the initial steps of mesoderm induction are potentially reversible. Animal hemisphere cells can be induced to form mesoderm by fibroblast growth factor (FGF). Different cell types predominate at different FGF concentrations and the neighbours in this sequence are also the pairs of cell types most usually associated in mixed clones derived from the marginal zone. We propose that the specification of individual cells depends upon both the concentration of inducing factor and on stochastic intracellular events.


Sujet(s)
Blastocyste/physiologie , Induction embryonnaire/physiologie , Mésoderme/cytologie , Xenopus/embryologie , Animaux , Blastocyste/ultrastructure , Cellules cultivées , Facteurs de croissance fibroblastique/physiologie , Mésoderme/physiologie , Mésoderme/ultrastructure , Microscopie électronique
11.
Development ; 110(2): 435-43, 1990 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2133547

RÉSUMÉ

The first inductive interaction in amphibian development is mesoderm induction, during which a signal from the vegetal hemisphere of the blastula-staged embryo induces mesoderm from overlying equatorial cells. Recently, a number of 'mesoderm-inducing factors' (MIFs), which may be responsible for this interaction, have been discovered. Examples of these MIFs include members of the fibroblast growth factor family as well as members of the TGF-beta superfamily such as TGF-beta 2. In addition to these purified factors, several new sources of mesoderm-inducing activity have been described. One of the most potent of these is the murine myelomonocytic leukemia cell line WEHI-3. Even at high dilutions, conditioned medium from WEHI-3 cells induces isolated Xenopus animal pole regions to form a variety of mesodermal cell types. In this paper we show by several criteria, including N-terminal amino acid sequencing, Northern blotting and various functional assays, that the WEHI-MIF is activin A. Activins are known to modulate the release of follicle-stimulating hormone from cultured anterior pituitary cells and to cause the differentiation of two erythroleukemia cell lines. Our results, along with recent data from other laboratories, indicate that these molecules may also act in early development in the formation of the mesoderm.


Sujet(s)
Induction embryonnaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Inhibines/isolement et purification , Leucémie myéloïde/métabolisme , Mésoderme/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Xenopus laevis/embryologie , Activines , Séquence d'acides aminés , Animaux , Inhibines/pharmacologie , Mésoderme/physiologie , Souris , Données de séquences moléculaires , ARN messager/isolement et purification , Cellules cancéreuses en culture/métabolisme
12.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 327(1239): 75-84, 1990 Mar 12.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1969663

RÉSUMÉ

In early amphibian development the mesoderm is formed around the equator of the blastula in response to inductive signals from the endoderm. At the time of its formation the mesoderm consists of a large 'ventral type' zone and a small 'organizer' zone. A screen of candidate substances showed that a small group of heparin binding growth factors (HBGFs) were active as mesoderm inducing agents in vitro. The fibroblast growth factors (aFGF and bFGF) and embryonal carcinoma derived growth factor (ECDGF) all show similar potency and can produce ventral inductions at concentrations above about 100 pm. Single blastula ectoderm cells can be induced and will differentiate in a defined medium to form mesodermal tissues and all inner blastula cells are competent to respond to the factors. Inducing activity can be extracted from Xenopus blastulae and can be purified by heparin affinity chromatography. Antibody neutralization and Western blotting experiments identify this activity as bFGF. The amounts present are small but would be sufficient to evoke ventral inductions in vivo. It is not yet known whether the bFGF is localized to the endoderm, although it is known that inducing activity secreted by endodermal cells can be neutralized by heparin. The competence of ectoderm to respond to FGF rises from about the 128-cell-stage and falls again by the onset of gastrulation. This change is paralleled by a rise and fall of binding of 125I-labelled aFGF. Chemical cross-linking reveals that this binding is attributable to a receptor of molecular mass about 130 kilodaltons (kDa). The receptor is present both in the marginal zone, which responds to the signal in vivo, and in the animal pole region, which is not induced in vivo but which will respond to HBGFs in vitro. In intact embryos we believe that the ventral type mesoderm forms the somites, kidney and other intermediate structures as well as the blood islands of the ventral midline. These intermediate structures are induced as a function of distance from the organizer in a process called 'dorsalization'. Lithium salts have a dorsalizing effect on whole embryos and also on explants from the ventral marginal zone, causing them to form large blocks of muscle. Lithium will also cause large muscle blocks to form when applied to ectoderm explants together with FGF. It is difficult to extend these results directly to mammalian embryos, but we have shown that the products of the murine int-2 gene and of the human k-fgf genes are active as mesoderm inducing factors.


Sujet(s)
Blastocyste/cytologie , Facteurs de croissance fibroblastique/pharmacologie , Mésoderme/cytologie , Animaux , Blastocyste/physiologie , Différenciation cellulaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Embryon non mammalien/physiologie , Femelle , Facteurs de croissance fibroblastique/physiologie , Mésoderme/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Mésoderme/physiologie , Techniques de culture d'organes , Récepteurs de surface cellulaire/isolement et purification , Récepteurs de surface cellulaire/physiologie , Récepteur facteur croissance fibroblaste , Xenopus
13.
Dev Biol ; 134(2): 486-90, 1989 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2744244

RÉSUMÉ

Acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) has been used to induce mesoderm from single animal pole cells of midblastula stage Xenopus embryos. The cells are individually cultured in a completely defined medium and are able to differentiate as small clones in a high proportion of cases. FGF-treated cells can give rise to several mesodermal cell types, while untreated cells show only epidermal or neural differentiation. Mesodermal differentiation can occur in clones of as few as eight cells, indicating that any additional cell-cell interactions required for mesodermal differentiation can be met by the medium used.


Sujet(s)
Facteurs de croissance fibroblastique/pharmacologie , Mésoderme/cytologie , Animaux , Différenciation cellulaire , Cellules cultivées , Clones cellulaires , Ectoderme/cytologie , Ectoderme/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Cellules épidermiques , Mésoderme/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Xenopus laevis
14.
Development ; 107 Suppl: 141-8, 1989.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2636135

RÉSUMÉ

In early amphibian development, the mesoderm is formed around the equator of the blastula in response to an inductive signal from the endoderm. A screen of candidate substances showed that a small group of heparin-binding growth factors (HBGFs) were active as mesoderm-inducing agents in vitro. The factors aFGF, bFGF, kFGF and ECDGF all show similar potency and can produce inductions at concentrations above about 100 pM. The product of the murine int-2 gene is also active, but with a lower specific activity. Above the induction threshold there is a progressive increase of muscle formation with dose. Single blastula ectoderm cells can be induced and will differentiate in a defined medium to form mesodermal tissues. All inner blastula cells are competent to respond to the factors but outer cells, bearing oocyte-derived membrane, are not. Inducing activity can be extracted from Xenopus blastulae and binds to heparin like the previously described HBGFs. Antibody neutralization and Western blotting experiments identify this activity as bFGF. The amounts present are small but would be sufficient to evoke inductions in vivo. It is not yet known whether the bFGF is localized to the endoderm, although it is known that inducing activity secreted by endodermal cells can be neutralized by heparin. The competence of ectoderm to respond to HBGFs rises from about the 128-cell stage and falls again by the onset of gastrulation. This change is paralleled by a rise and fall of binding of 125I-aFGF. Chemical cross-linking reveals that this binding is attributable to a receptor of relative molecular mass about 130 x 10(3).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Sujet(s)
Différenciation cellulaire , Induction embryonnaire , Facteurs de croissance fibroblastique/physiologie , Xenopus laevis/embryologie , Animaux , Ectoderme/physiologie , Mésoderme/physiologie , Facteurs de croissance transformants/physiologie
15.
Development ; 102(3): 555-66, 1988 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3181034

RÉSUMÉ

Mesoderm-inducing factors (MIF's) from chick embryos, XTC cells and WEHI-3 cells were studied using various procedures. The object was to find whether they are similar to heparin-binding growth factors (HBGFs-the only known pure mesoderm-inducing substances) and, if not, whether they are similar to each other. The major active components from all three MIF sources behave as somewhat hydrophobic, acid-stable molecules and do not bind to heparin. They all have relative molecular masses of about 13,000 measured by HPLC size exclusion chromatography. The isoelectric points measured by chromatofocusing were 6.7 (WEHI) and 7.7 (XTC). The chick MIF seemed somewhat heterogeneous by chromatofocusing and a portion of its activity bound to heparin sepharose. All three MIFs have similar effects on explants of Xenopus blastula ectoderm to the heparin-binding growth factors, causing an elongation at the time of gastrulation followed by the development of mesenchyme, mesothelium and muscle cells, the proportion of muscle increasing with dose. Unlike the HBGFs they all also induce notochord if sufficiently high concentrations are used. Our study shows that the MIFs examined here form a small group of potent agents distinct from the HBGFs and from other known growth and differentiations factors. Their occurrence in various tissues and cell lines suggests that they have functions in the adult organism as well as during early development.


Sujet(s)
Différenciation cellulaire , Induction embryonnaire , Substances de croissance , Mésoderme/physiologie , Animaux , Embryon de poulet , Chromatographie en phase liquide à haute performance , Focalisation isoélectrique , Xenopus laevis
16.
Nature ; 326(6109): 197-200, 1987.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3821895

RÉSUMÉ

In early embryonic development the basic body plan arises because cells in different regions become programmed to follow different developmental pathways. We have proposed that in the early amphibian embryo this process of regional specification arises from the action of three different inducing factors, or morphogens, but we have not until now had any idea of their chemical nature. In this paper we report that pure basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), at very low concentrations and with high specificity, closely mimics the effect of the ventrovegetal (VV) signal and that the transmission of the natural VV signal can be blocked by heparin, suggesting that it may be a heparin-binding factor such as bFGF.


Sujet(s)
Facteurs de croissance fibroblastique/pharmacologie , Substances de croissance/pharmacologie , Héparine/métabolisme , Xenopus laevis/embryologie , Animaux , Cycle cellulaire/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Relation dose-effet des médicaments , Héparine/pharmacologie , Interphase , Mésoderme/cytologie , Morphogenèse/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Liaison aux protéines , Facteurs temps
17.
J Embryol Exp Morphol ; 97: 201-23, 1986 Sep.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2432146

RÉSUMÉ

Antibodies against various intermediate filament proteins have been used to follow cell differentiation in the early Xenopus embryo. Three new monoclonal antibodies against Xenopus cytokeratins raised against Triton-insoluble material from tadpoles (RD35/2a, RD35/3a and D3/3a), two antibodies against mammalian cytokeratins (LE65 and LP3K), monoclonal anti-(rat 200 K neurofilament protein), rabbit anti-(rat glial filament acidic protein), and rabbit antibodies to hamster and calf vimentin were used. We show that cytokeratins are present in the early central nervous system (CNS) and persist in the ependymal cells of the adult CNS. We also show that the notochord contains cytokeratin. The ontogeny of intermediate filament protein appearance in the CNS, skin and notochord between neural fold stage and swimming tadpole stage are described. These results are discussed in particular with regard to the use of the antibodies as differentiation markers.


Sujet(s)
Système nerveux central/embryologie , Embryon non mammalien/métabolisme , Protéines de filaments intermédiaires/métabolisme , Chorde/métabolisme , Peau/embryologie , Xenopus laevis/embryologie , Animaux , Anticorps monoclonaux , Spécificité des anticorps , Technique d'immunofluorescence , Protéines de filaments intermédiaires/immunologie , Kératines/immunologie , Microscopie électronique , Chorde/immunologie , Vimentine/immunologie
18.
J Embryol Exp Morphol ; 89 Suppl: 1-15, 1985 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2420913

RÉSUMÉ

Much is known about determinative events in early amphibian embryos, perhaps more than any other animal group. However, as yet, little attention has been focused on the cytoarchitecture of the oocyte, and the way in which this could regulate asymmetries in the egg, which in turn could lead to developmentally important interactions. The changing cytoarchitecture of the Xenopus oocyte is described with the emphasis on the following: -firstly the polarity; the oocyte is not radially symmetrical at early stages of oogenesis, but shows marked polarity. Secondly, several cytoskeletal elements change their distribution during oogenesis, and again during maturation to form a fertilizable egg. Thirdly, monoclonal antibody methods show that the oocyte develops several asymmetries which are retained in the egg and early embryo, and may be lineage related.


Sujet(s)
Cytosquelette , Ovocytes , Xenopus/embryologie , Animaux , Anticorps monoclonaux , Antigènes/analyse , Kératines/immunologie , Ovogenèse , Tubuline/immunologie , Vimentine/immunologie , Vitellogenèse , Xenopus/immunologie
19.
J Embryol Exp Morphol ; 83: 169-87, 1984 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6389749

RÉSUMÉ

Previous studies have shown that Xenopus oocytes possess a cortical shell, which includes actin-containing microfilaments and cytokeratin-containing intermediate filaments. In this paper we show that oocytes of Xenopus laevis also contain filaments throughout their cytoplasm which are stained by several anti-vimentin antibody preparations. We also show that dramatic changes in pattern of these filaments occur during oocyte differentiation, first during vitellogenesis, and then during maturation of the oocyte to form an egg.


Sujet(s)
Stade de la segmentation de l'oeuf/analyse , Cytosquelette/analyse , Ovocytes/analyse , Vimentine/analyse , Animaux , Anticorps/immunologie , Différenciation cellulaire , Stade de la segmentation de l'oeuf/ultrastructure , Cytosquelette/ultrastructure , Électrophorèse sur gel de polyacrylamide , Femelle , Technique d'immunofluorescence , Immunoélectrophorèse , Microscopie électronique , Microscopie de fluorescence , Ovocytes/ultrastructure , Vimentine/immunologie , Xenopus laevis
20.
J Embryol Exp Morphol ; 83: 157-67, 1984 Oct.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6209357

RÉSUMÉ

Cytokeratins have previously been shown to exist in the Xenopus oocyte cortex. Using three monoclonal antibodies against cytokeratins, we follow the appearance of cytokeratin-containing filaments, and their changes in distribution during oocyte differentiation and maturation. Cytokeratin-containing filaments are shown to change dramatically in distribution in the oocyte during its ontogeny.


Sujet(s)
Cytosquelette/analyse , Kératines/analyse , Ovocytes/analyse , Animaux , Anticorps monoclonaux/immunologie , Différenciation cellulaire , Cytosquelette/ultrastructure , Femelle , Technique d'immunofluorescence , Kératines/immunologie , Ovocytes/ultrastructure , Xenopus laevis
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