Abstract
This study was undertaken to investigate the establishment of the scleral cartilage in the chick embryo. Johnston et al. (1974) has demonstrated that most of the cells of the scleral cartilage originate in the cranial neural crest. By means of a series of chorioallantoic grafts of pigmented retina, and its adherent periocular mesenchyme from stage 11 to 25, the present experiments show that the cranial neural crest cells arrive at the eye in sufficient numbers to form cartilage by stage 14. Pigmented retina, denuded of mesenchyme, from stage 16 embryos implanted into the head of stage 13 embryos induces cartilage formation in head mesenchyme. However, neither pigmented retina nor spinal cord could induce cartilage formation in chorioallantoic mesenchyme. Combination grafts of cranial neural crest and presumptive optic vesicle developed neural tissue, pigmented retina, and in some cases sclera-like cartilage. Thus, periorbital mesenchyme, derived largely from cranial neural crest, at about stage 14 develops the scleral cartilage in response to induction by the pigmented retina.
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