Abstract

Small pieces of the animal cap of X. borealis gastrulae were transplanted into various regions of the noninvoluting marginal zone of albino X. laevis gastrulae, and the distribution of the donor cells was analyzed by quinacrine fluorescence staining. The present study indicated that the prospective central nervous system (CNS) lies as a belt-shaped area in the noninvoluting marginal zone of early gastrulae. This belt-shaped prospective neural area extends as far as 0.7 mm (115° to the vegetal pole) above the blastopore in the dorsal midline and 1.3 mm lateral (130° to the dorsal midline) to the dorsal midline. The ectoderm of the dorsal region extends in the animal-vegetal direction and forms the ventral side of the CNS. The dorsalateral and lateral regions converge toward the dorsal midline and extended in the animal-vegetal direction. The former constitutes the lateral side of the anterior CNS, and the latter the dorso-lateral side of the posterior CNS. The outer layer of ectoderm which was transplanted onto the inner layer of the host gastrula differentiated into neural tissues. The prospective areas of the CNS and their morphogenetic movement during Xenopus embryogenesis are also discussed with regard to neural induction.

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