Literature DB >> 28304475

[Comparative investigation of the growth of rat and mouse embryos].

Helga Schumann1.   

Abstract

The growth of rat and mouse embryos follows a different course. Volume and weight studies have shown that after 65% of the gestation period has elapsed, the mouse embryo is larger and heavier than the rat embryo. At birth, however, the rat is about 4 times as heavy as the mouse. The mouse has a more or less uniform growth over the entire gestation period, whereas the chief growth of the rat occurs in the last third of the gestation period. The rapid growth of the rat during this time does not result from an increment in water content; the dry matter undergoes an increase nearly proportional to that of the total body weight.The cells of the 17-day mouse embryo are somewhat smaller than those of the 19-day rat embryo, but the difference is small. On the other hand, the rate of mitosis in the 19-day rat is 20% higher than that of the comparable mouse embryo, in accordance with the faster growth which becomes established at this time in the rat.In contrast to growth, certain of the processes of differentiation occur earlier in the rat than in the mouse. This holds true, for example, for the formation of the crypts in the small intestine and the hair anlagen. The ossification of the cartilaginous skeleton begins at about the same time in the two rodents.

Entities:  

Year:  1969        PMID: 28304475     DOI: 10.1007/BF00577019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Wilhelm Roux Arch Entwickl Mech Org        ISSN: 0043-5546


  3 in total

1.  The control of mitotic activity in adult mammalian tissues.

Authors:  W S BULLOUGH
Journal:  Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc       Date:  1962-08

2.  Analysis of Quantitative Inheritance of Body Size in Mice. I. Hybridization and Maternal Influence.

Authors:  C K Chai
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1956-03       Impact factor: 4.562

3. 

Authors:  Hermann Wurmbach
Journal:  Wilhelm Roux Arch Entwickl Mech Org       Date:  1954-01
  3 in total
  3 in total

1.  Late prenatal ontogeny of central monoamine neurons in the rat: Fluorescence histochemical observations.

Authors:  A Seiger; L Olson
Journal:  Z Anat Entwicklungsgesch       Date:  1973-08-30

2.  Early prenatal ontogeny of central monoamine neurons in the rat: fluorescence histochemical observations.

Authors:  L Olson; A Seiger
Journal:  Z Anat Entwicklungsgesch       Date:  1972

3.  [Dose and time dependence of radiation-induced chromosome aberrations in rat embryos].

Authors:  J Eicke; O Hug
Journal:  Biophysik       Date:  1971
  3 in total

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