Abstract

The cell lineage of chick leg muscle between 3 and 12 days of development has been studied by use of an in vitro clonal assay. The assay permits distinctions to be made among various types of muscle-colony-forming cells (MCF cells) on the basis of their medium requirements and clonal morphology. Results suggest the sequential occurrence of at least four types of MCF cells, three of which require conditioned medium for their differentiation and one of which can form differentiated colonies in fresh medium. The nature of the “conditioned medium effect” was further investigated by the use of medium-switch experiments. By this process it was shown that the same populations of colony-forming cells attach and grow in fresh and conditioned medium and that the differentiation of colonies derived from conditioned-medium-requiring myoblasts is permitted by brief exposure to conditioned medium followed by culture in fresh medium. Further investigation indicated that during brief exposure to conditioned medium the gelatin-coated petri plate surface is altered such that differentiation of conditioned-medium-requiring colonies is allowed. We conclude that the conditioned medium effect involves a surface-mediated interaction between myoblasts and one or more conditioned medium components.

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