| Literature DB >> 29865314 |
Hirohumi Suzuki1, Akio Kondo1.
Abstract
Early embryonic development, from the first cleavage to the germ-disk stage, in the theridiid spider Achaearanea japonica was examined by light and electron microscopy. The eggs are syncytial during the first four cleavages, and then invaginations of cell membranes fuse to generate the blastomeres at the sixteen-nucleus stage. The cleavage pattern is a modified type of total cleavage. It appears that radial bundles of microtubules that radiate from the perinuclear cytoplasm may participate in the migration of cleavage nuclei for the formation of the blastoderm. The large yolk granules are sequestered by cell membranes from the blastomeres or blastoderm cells into the interior of the embryo together with various organelles and glycogen granules. Most of the blastoderm cells converge in the upper hemisphere to form the germ disk, whereas a few cells remain in the lower hemisphere. The embryo at the germ-disk stage contains many spherical germ-disk cells. Almost no large yolk granules are found in these cells, but the flat remaining cells each contain several large yolk granules. These remaining cells may preserve a flat shape to cover the surface of the embryo that does not include the germ disk. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
Year: 1995 PMID: 29865314 DOI: 10.1002/jmor.1052240204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Morphol ISSN: 0022-2887 Impact factor: 1.804