Abstract

It was suggested recently that gastrulation movements in amphibian embryos are caused by the active cell locomotion of individual cells. In order to elucidate the role of microfilaments and microtubules in the cell locomotion occurring during gastrulation, cytochalasin B, colchicine, and other microtubule-disrupting drugs were injected into the blastocoel of early gastrulae of Xenopus laevis. Hypertonic solutions of sorbitol were also injected to elucidate the influence of the internal hydrostatic pressure on the migrating cells. The effects were examined in 1-μm Epon sections of serially fixed embryos and by transmission electron microscopy. Cytochalasin B strongly inhibits cell migration even under conditions that do not cause dissociation into single cells. The cells become round, and have only a few thin cell processes. Electron microscopy shows an alteration in the cortical microfilament network. Colchicine and other microtubule-disrupting drugs have little effect on the rate of cell migration before they cause the accumulation of many mitotic cells and the dissociation of the embryo. The interphase cells are angular and have thin processes like those in the control embryos. The microtubules disappear, and bundles of 10-nm filaments are observed in the cytoplasm of colchicine-injected embryos. Hypertonic sorbitol solutions strongly inhibit cell migration.

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