Abstract

Anti-NS-5 antiserum raised in C3H.SW/Sn mice against cerebellum of 4-day-old C57BL/6J mice could be shown to recognize two cell surface antigens on cerebellar cells, NS-5 1 and NS-5 2, the latter antigen being shared with mouse and rat but not rabbit sperm. An antigen operationally identical to NS-5 2 was detected using indirect immunofluorescence staining on mouse preimplantation stages of development. While the unfertilized ova did not express detectable antigen on the cell surface, the fertilized egg expressed antigen shortly before the first cleavage division. From that stage onward, the anti-NS-5 antiserum stained the blastomeres of all stages, including the trophoblast cells and inner cell mass cells of the blastocyst. No difference in staining activity was observed for preimplantation embryos of various mouse strains analyzed: C57BL/6J, BALB/c, 129/J, C3H/DiSn, CKB × BALB.K, C3H.SW/Sn, and Swiss Webster mice. The staining activity was removed when the antiserum was preabsorbed with cerebellum or sperm from any of these mouse strains or with cerebellum and sperm of rats. Lymphocytes, thymocytes, liver, kidney, and skeletal muscle from early postnatal and adult mice and heart from early postnatal mice did not absorb the staining activity and neither did rabbit sperm nor cerebellum.

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