Literature DB >> 1769326

Changes in neural and lens competence in Xenopus ectoderm: evidence for an autonomous developmental timer.

M Servetnick1, R M Grainger.   

Abstract

The ability of a tissue to respond to induction, termed its competence, is often critical in determining both the timing of inductive interactions and the extent of induced tissue. We have examined the lens-forming competence of Xenopus embryonic ectoderm by transplanting it into the presumptive lens region of open neural plate stage embryos. We find that early gastrula ectoderm has little lens-forming competence, but instead forms neural tissue, despite its location outside the neural plate; we believe that the transplants are being neuralized by a signal originating in the host neural plate. This neural competence is not localized to a particular region within the ectoderm since both dorsal and ventral portions of early gastrula ectoderm show the same response. As ectoderm is taken from gastrulae of increasing age, its neural competence is gradually lost, while lens competence appears and then rapidly disappears during later gastrula stages. To determine whether these developmental changes in competence result from tissue interactions during gastrulation, or are due to autonomous changes within the ectoderm itself, ectoderm was removed from early gastrulae and cultured for various periods of time before transplantation. The loss of neural competence, and the gain and loss of lens competence, all occur in ectoderm cultured in vitro with approximately the same time course as seen in ectoderm in vitro. Thus, at least from the beginning of gastrulation onwards, changes in competence occur autonomously within ectoderm. We propose that there is a developmental timing mechanism in embryonic ectoderm that specifies a sequence of competences solely on the basis of the age of the ectoderm.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1769326     DOI: 10.1242/dev.112.1.177

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Development        ISSN: 0950-1991            Impact factor:   6.868


  10 in total

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2.  Early stages of induction of anterior head ectodermal properties in Xenopus embryos are mediated by transcriptional cofactor ldb1.

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3.  Functional Cloning Using a Xenopus Oocyte Expression System.

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5.  Facial transplants in Xenopus laevis embryos.

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7.  The lens-regenerating competence in the outer cornea and epidermis of larval Xenopus laevis is related to pax6 expression.

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8.  Requirement of Smad4 from Ocular Surface Ectoderm for Retinal Development.

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Review 9.  On the nature and function of organizers.

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Journal:  Development       Date:  2018-03-09       Impact factor: 6.868

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  10 in total

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