Abstract

Yolk granules were collected from full-grown ovarian oocytes of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, and dissolved in 3% acetic acid or 8 M urea solution. Culture dishes were then coated with either of the yolk-granule solutions. The yolk-coated surfaces acted as adhesive substrata for dissociated gastrula cells, which showed active locomotion when spread on the surfaces. Divalent cation was required for cell adhesion and spreading on the yolk-coated surface. Trypsin and glycosidase digestions of dissociated cells or the yolk-coated surfaces inhibited cell adhesion and spreading. Addition of concanavalin A to the culture medium inhibited cell spreading on the yolk-coated surfaces, while high concentration (50 mM) of the saccharides, D-galactose, D-lactose and D-mannose, had a slightly inhibitory effect on cell spreading. Two yolk components (30-kD and 108-kD proteins) were isolated from yolk granules and applied to the culture dish surfaces. Surfaces coated with the 30-kD protein showed strong adhesiveness for dissociated gastrula cells.

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