Abstract

The present study in the embryo of the lizard Anolis lineatopus describes the modality of cell proliferation responsible for the morphogenesis of the digital pad lamellae and of the epidermal stratification. After tritiated thymidine and 5‐bromodeoxy‐uridine administration, autoradiographic and immunocytochemical methods have been used. The lamellae originate as long, slightly slanted, undulations of the epidermis of fingers and toes. At an early stage, the epidermis consists of an outer periderm and a basal layer. Cell hypertrophy, and the prevalent cell proliferation in the longer side of the undulation with respect to the shorter side, generate the surface of the outer lamella. Under the peridermis, a shedding complex, composed by clear and oberhautchen layers, is formed and later determines the first intraepidermal shed. The first subperidermal layer derived from the basal layer is a clear layer and the first shed epidermis in the embryo is represented by periderm and clear layer. The heavily granulated clear layer in Anolis lineatopus represents the first epidermal layer produced in the embryonic epidermis, and is connected with the process of shedding. The spinulae of the underlying oberhautchen in the outer scale surface become long setae which grow toward the upper clear layer. Under the shedding complex a β‐layer is produced. Autoradiographical study shows that the radioactivity stays in the basal layer for about 4 days before cells move to upper layers. At 6–8 days post‐injection labelled cells are visible in the differentiated clear, oberhautchen and β‐layers. Under the β‐layer differentiating mesos cells are visible before the embryo hatches.

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