Abstract

The hemangiogenic potencies of initially avascular intra-embryonic mesoderm were studied in chick and quail embryos and in chick-quail chimeras. The prechordal mesoderm, primitive streak and primitive node of quail embryos were heterospecifically grafted into limb buds of chick embryos. Hemangiopoietic quail cells in the host limb were detected by immunohistological staining with the monoclonal anti-MB-1 antibody after 3-6 days of re-incubation. The antibody is specifically directed against quail hemangiopoietic cells and their derivatives. Quail endothelial cells were found in pure quail and in chimeric vessels, inside as well as outside the graft. The main artery of the limb and the vessels inside the graft were connected by chimeric arteries. Proximal to the graft, quail endothelial cells were located predominantly within the lining of the main artery, while distally they were found mainly in the veins and the marginal sinus. The results show that, as early as stage 3 (according to Hamburger and Hamilton 1951, HH) all parts of the avascular intraembryonic mesoderm tested, give rise to endothelial cells. Both mechanisms, angiogenesis and vasculogenesis, contribute to the vascularization of the limb. Immunocytological and scanning electron microscopic studies indicate that centrifugal and centripetal migration of angiogenic cells occurs outside the vessels as well as on the inner surface of the endothelium.

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