Abstract

Inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm cell lineages in preimplantation mouse embryos were studied by means of iontophoretic injection of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) as a marker. HRP was injected into single blastomeres at the 2- and 8-cell stages and into single outer blastomeres at the 16-cell and late morula (about 22- to 32-cell) stages. After injection, embryos were either examined immediately for localization of HRP (controls) or they were allowed to develop until the blastocyst stage (1 to 3.5 days of culture) and examined for the distribution of labeled cells. In control embryos, HRP was confined to one or two outer blastomeres. In embryos allowed to develop into blastocysts, HRP-labeled progeny were distributed into patches of cells, showing that there is limited intermingling of cells during preimplantation development. A substantial fraction of injected blastomeres contributed descendants to both ICM and trophectoderm (95, 58, 44, and 35% for injected 2-cell, 8-cell, 16-cell, and late morula stages, respectively). Although more than half of the outer cells injected at 16-cell and late morula stages contributed descendants only to trophectoderm (53 and 63%, respectively), some outer cells contributed also to the ICM lineage even at the late morula stage. Although the mechanism for allocation of outer cells to the inner cell lineage is unknown, our observation of adjacent labeled mural trophectoderm and presumptive endoderm cells implicated polarized cell division. This observation also suggests that mural trophectoderm and presumptive endoderm are derived from common immediate progenitors. These cells appear to separate into inner and outer layers during the fifth cleavage division. Our results demonstrate the usefulness of HRP as a cell lineage marker in mouse embryos and show that the allocation of cells to ICM or trophectoderm begins after the 2-cell stage and continues into late cleavage.

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