Abstract
We studied the extent of cell-to-cell communication via junctional channels in in vitro-implanted mouse blastocysts by monitoring ionic coupling and the spread of two injected low molecular weight dyes, fluorescein and Lucifer yellow. In the early attached embryos, both trophoblasts and cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) were ionically coupled to one another. Dye injections in either trophoblasts or ICM cells resulted in spread to the entire embryo. As older and more developed embryos were examined, the spread of injected dye was progressively more limited. In the most developed embryos examined, dye injected into a cell in the ICM region resulted in spread throughout the ICM but not into the surrounding trophoblast cells, while dye injected into a trophoblast cell did not spread to any other cell in the embryo. Simultaneous monitoring of ionic coupling and dye injections in embryos of intermediate stages in this transition revealed that the trophoblast and ICM cells were ionically coupled, even across the apparent boundary where no dye was observed to pass. In the latest stage embryos examined in which no injected dye was observed to move out of the ICM, ionic coupling was still observed between the cells of the ICM and the trophoblasts. Furthermore, in the more developed embryos, dye injected into the ICM region frequently was not transferred to all the cells of the ICM, thus suggesting a further compartmentalization of dye spread within the ICM. Our observations that ionic coupling is more extensive than the detectable spread of injected dyes may perhaps reflect a reduced number of junctional channels. With fewer channels less dye would pass between cells, so that, together with continuous quenching, the transfer of injected dye would not be detectable. This partial segregation of cell-to-cell communication as indicated by the limited dye spread may parallel specific differentiation processes, in particular that of giant trophoblast, embryonic ectoderm and extraembryonic endoderm differentiation.
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