Abstract

According to the concept of resegmentation, the boundaries of vertebrae are shifted one half a segment compared with somite boundaries. This theory has been experimentally confirmed by interspecific transplantations of single somites. Due to the difficulty of exactly orientating individual somites in the host embryo, the outcome and interpretations of these experiments have occasionally been questioned. This is especially true for the formation of neural arches, their processes, and the ribs. We reinvestigated the formation of vertebrae in the avian embryo by grafting one and one half somites from quail to chick embryos. This method eliminates the possibility of a wrong somite orientation in the host embryo. Results show that the vertebral body, the neural arch and its processes are made up of material of two adjacent somites. This is also true for the rib, with the exception of the costal head, which is formed by only one somite. Whereas in the proximal part of the costal body the chick and quail cell regions border on each other in the middle of the rib, in its distal part quail cells gradually begin to mix with chick cells. The intersegmental muscles and their skeletal attachments sites are formed from the same somite. These results support and complete the data of previous studies and confirm the resegmentation concept.

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