Abstract

A mucin was discovered on the surface of migratory primordial germ cells (PGCs) from chick and rat embryos by means of two monoclonal antibodies. The protein was found to be identical or closely related to ovomucin, a 600 X 10(3) relative molecular mass glycoprotein, and a major constituent of the vitelline membrane of the avian yolk. Based on its resemblance to ovomucin it is referred to as ovomucin-like protein (OLP). The OLP was expressed on PGCs from E3 to E7 female, and from E3 to E12 male chick embryos as the PGCs migrate and colonize the gonadal ridges. After the PGCs have settled in the gonads, they no longer express OLP. In tissue cultures of dissociated cells from E6 gonads, OLP was present only on cells that were positive for PAS staining, the standard histological method to identify PGCs in the chick embryo. Since unfixed PGCs were recognized by the antibodies, at least part of the OLP is localized on the cell surface. The anti-OLP antibodies also stained PGCs in the gonads of the rat embryo, showing that the expression of this antigen on PGCs is phylogenetically conserved. Ovomucin isolated from vitelline membrane prevented adhesion of fibroblasts but not PGCs when used a as a substratum in vitro. The anti-adhesive quality of the mucin resides in the sialic acid residues of the carbohydrate side chains. We propose that OLP has a similar anti-adhesive quality as the ovomucin from vitelline membrane, and that this anti-adhesive property is important to prevent precocious adhesion of migrating PGCs to blood vessel walls and to connective tissue in the mesentery as they migrate toward the gonadal ridges.

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