Abstract
The germinal plate of 5- to 12-day-old embryos of the leech Hirudo medicinalis consists of an anterior and a posterior sector that differ both structurally and developmentally. The posterior sector includes the five pairs of teloblasts and five paired longitudinal bandlets of stem cells and their descendant blast cells. The mesoteloblast pair and their descendant cells of the m bandlet divide spirally and give rise to bilaterally paired cell clusters. The four ectoteloblast pairs and their descendant cells of the n, o, p and q bandlet pairs divide unidirectionally and give rise to paired one-cell-thick and four-cell-wide ectodermal arches. The developmentally more advanced anterior sector of the germinal plate consists of differentiating ectodermal and mesodermal cells engaged in organogenesis. The mesodermal cell clusters develop into somites, whereas the expanding ectodermal arches develop into nerve cord ganglia and epidermis. Rostrocaudal expansion of somite tissue results in the formation of obliquely oriented intersegmental septa, causing the ganglia to take on an intersegmental distribution. The first sign that formation of body segments has been completed is the appearance of a bilateral gap in the mesodermal bandlet of the posterior sector of the germinal plate. This gap seems to trigger degeneration of the posterior sector of the germinal plate.
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