Abstract

Cell junctions in the early chick embryo have been examined in freeze-etch specimen. Well developed zonulae occludentes are found in the epiblast as early as stage 4. Large gap junctions are also found in the epiblast at this stage. In those cells which have left the surface to form mesenchymal structures (Hensen's node, juxtanodal mesenchyme, primitive streak mesenchyme), one finds not only gap, but also tight, junctions. These junctions do not form continuous belts, but appear as fragments, often reduced to single strands, of typical tight junctions. They probably correspond to the focal tight junctions described earlier in sectioned material. The origin and possible significance of these contacts is discussed, and it is suggested that they represent remnants of junctions between neighboring cells in the epiblast. These junctional remnants slowly disappear by “dilution,” either through cell division and/or cell movement. The appearance of newly formed gap junctions is also described.

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