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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Development genes and evolution 208 (1998), S. 117-127 
    ISSN: 1432-041X
    Keywords: Key words Annelida ; Leech ; Cell fusion ; Endoderm ; Macromeres
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  At the four-cell stage, embryos of glossiphoniid leeches comprise identified blastomeres A, B, C and D. Subsequent cleavages of the A, B and C quadrants yield three large, yolk-rich endodermal precursor cells, macromeres A′′′, B′′′ and C′′′. Eventually, these cells generate the epithelial lining of the gut via cellularization of a multinucleate syncytium. Meanwhile, cleavage in the D quadrant generates ten teloblasts that give rise to segmental mesoderm and ectoderm via stem cell divisions. Here we show that, during cleavage, macromeres A′′′, B′′′ and C′′′ shift clockwise relative to the D quadrant, while C′′′ comes to envelop the nascent teloblasts. During gastrulation, derivatives of the teloblasts undergo epibolic movements over the surface of the A′′′, B′′′ and C′′′ macromeres to form the germinal plate, from which segmental tissues arise. We find that the three macromeres fuse in a stepwise manner to initiate formation of the multinucleate syncytium; cell C′′′ fuses about 25 h after the fusion of A′′′ and B′′′, and the teloblasts fuse with the macromere-derived syncytium later still. When macromeres are biochemically arrested by microinjecting them with the A chain of ricin, a further difference among the macromeres is revealed. Biochemical arrest of A′′′ or B′′′ slightly retards the rate of germinal plate formation, but arrest of C′′′ frequently accelerates this process.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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