| Literature DB >> 6640624 |
M B Pochapin, J M Sanger, J W Sanger.
Abstract
Eggs and embryos of Arbacia punctulata were microinjected with the fluorescent dye, Lucifer yellow CH, using a simple pressure injection system. When injected into eggs that were subsequently fertilized, the dye was distributed throughout all cells of the developing embryo. If one cell of a two-cell embryo was injected, dye did not diffuse into the uninjected blastomere. During subsequent development, all progeny of the injected cell contained dye resulting in an embryo that was half-fluorescent. Blue light irradiation of a two-cell embryo, one cell of which had been injected with Lucifer yellow, caused the injected blastomere to stop further divisions while the uninjected blastomere developed normally and was free of dye. These results indicate that the first two blastomeres of Arbacia embryos are not electrically coupled, nor up to the time of hatching, is there any coupling between cells in one half of the first cleavage plane and cells in the other half.Entities:
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Year: 1983 PMID: 6640624 DOI: 10.1007/BF00213770
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Res ISSN: 0302-766X Impact factor: 5.249