Abstract
The relation between the inducing activity and the cell-dissociation effect of Ca2+ -free (or Ca2+ , Mg2+ -free) saline solution (CF or CMF) on the early gastrula ectoderm was examined. In the culture medium containing no fetal calf serum (FCS), most ectoderm cells treated with CF or CMF died within a few days and only a few differentiated into epidermal cells. However, when the culture medium contained 2% FCS, ectoderm cells treated with CF or CMF differentiated into neural crest derivatives (NCDs), such as mesenchyme cells, pigment cells, and nerve cells. The frequency of the induction depended only on the duration of CF- or CMF-treatment. FCS alone had no inducing activity on ectoderm cells. On the contrary a high concentration of FCS gave an inhibitory effect on the induction. These results indicate that CF is a neuralizing factor and that CF-treated cells require FCS, not for induction, but for survival and differentiation. With CF, the maximum induction of NCDs required a longer duration than that necessary for complete cell-dissociation. This result suggests that the induction depends on some effects of CF other than cell-dissociation.
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