Abstract

Using the quail-chick chimera technique, we followed the fate of Rauber's sickle cells in older whole blastoderms (cultured for approximately 2 days): after removal of the autochthonous Rauber's sickle from an unincubated chicken blastoderm, a quail Rauber's sickle was grafted isotopically and isochronically in its place. In transverse sections through these chimeras, the grafted quail Rauber's sickle cells were seen to have transformed into a broad row or ridge of quail junctional endoblast cells extending at the inner border of the area containing blood islands. After unilateral removal of the junctional endoblast from an intermediate streak chicken blastoderm (Stage 3; Hamburger and Hamilton [1951] J Morphol 88:49-92), we observed during further in vitro culture that at the operated side, in the area previously occupied by this junctional endoblast, blood islands no longer developed. If after such a unilateral removal of the chicken junctional endoblast quail junctional endoblast was apposed in its place, then blood islands reappeared in the operated area. The intimate contact between the apposed quail junctional endoblast and the recently formed blood islands, derived from peripherally migrating mesoderm, was very obvious on sections through such chimeras. We further demonstrate that Rauber's sickle vs. junctional endoblast is indispensable for the anlage of blood islands in avian blastoderms. Indeed, in the absence of Rauber's sickle material no blood islands develop (even when mesoderm is present after ingression of the upper layer via a primitive streak) in the isolated central region of the area centralis of unincubated chicken blastoderms after culture in vitro. Also, no junctional endoblast and no sickle canal appear in these explants. By contrast, if a Rauber's sickle fragment is placed on such an isolated central blastoderm region, then blood islands develop. These blood islands start to develop from peripherally migrating mesoderm in the neighborhood of the Rauber's sickle-derived junctional endoblast.

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