Abstract

After incubation of isolated forelimb regenerates of Notophthalmus (Triturus) viridescens at all developmental stages for 60 minutes at 37 degrees C in a salt medium containing 111 mM sodium chloride, 5.6 mM potassium chloride and 100 mM sodium phosphate buffer at pH 7.5, the wound epithelium of each regenerate was removed intact from its underlying mesenchymal component. The suggestion is made that the salt medium is an effective epithelial-mesenchymal separating agent due to a combination of its hypertonicity, high ionic strength and the fact that the medium precipitates calcium as calcium phosphate. Attempts to dissect away the epithelium from the mesenchyme after incubation of isolated regenerates in sodium phosphate containing 1% or 3% Difco 1:250 trypsin, 10 mM EDTA or 150 units collagenase/ml medium were unsuccessful. Epidermis of adult newt forelimb skin was removed only after extended incubation of the forelimbs in the salt medium for three hours at 37 degrees C or after freezing isolated forelimbs in buffer and subsequent thawing.

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