Abstract
The aim of this investigation was to establish an experimental system for studying the causal relationship between DNA replication and tissue-specific enzyme development in ascidian embryos. Blastomeres were dissociated from 44∽64-ceIl Halocynthia roretzi embryos and fractionated by centrifugation through a discontinuous Percoll density gradient. When cells harvested from the fraction at the bottom of the tube were division-arrested with cytochalasin B (an inhibitor of cytokinesis) soon after their isolation, more than 70% of them developed histochemically-detectable muscle-specific acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity, suggesting that they were almost all blastomeres of muscle lineage. When these cells were arrested with aphidicolin (an inhibitor of DNA replication) and cytochalasin B immediately after their isolation, however, none of them showed AChE activity. When they were allowed to divide once and then arrested with the inhibitors, nearly 40 % of them developed AChE activity, and when they were allowed to divide twice before arrest, about 70% of them showed AChE activity.
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