Abstract

The blastomeres containing the "germinal plasm" were isolated from 32-cell stage Xenopus embryos and cultured in vitro for various periods of time till the control embryos developed to stage 28, 33/34, 40 and 45, respectively. The cells containing the plasm in the 'stage-28', '33/34' and '40' explants were similar in external shape, and in distribution in the spherical endodermal cell mass to the presumptive primordial germ cells (pPGCs) in normal embryos of the corresponding stages. In addition, the cells in explants as well as the pPGCs were separated by a large intercellular space from the surrounding endodermal cells. The change in proportion of the compact or the loosely structured germinal granules and the irregularly shaped-stringlike bodies (ISBs) occurred in the cells of the explants with the prolongation of the culture period. In the cells of the 'stage-45' explant as well as in the PGCs of normal stage-45 tadpoles the ISBs and "granular materials" replace those germinal granules. These facts lead to the conclusion that the change of the germinal granules through the ISBs, to the "granular materials", noticed in the normal course of differentiation of pPGCs into PGCs (see (1)), also takes place in the cells of the explants during the culture. Therefore, it is likely that the cells in the explants are genuine pPGCs or PGCs. This is the first demonstration of a possibility of the in vitro differentiation of PGCs from the blastomeres containing the "germinal plasm" of early cleavage stage.

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