Abstract

The micromeres at the 16-cell stage of sea urchin embryo have already been endowed with a faculty to self-differentiate into spicule-forming cells (11). The present experiment was designed to test whether the factor(s) necessary for such self-differentiation had already been localized at the 8-cell stage in an area corresponding to the presumptive micromere region in Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus. Since the blastomeres at the 8-cell stage are all equal in size in normal embryo, unequal 3rd cleavage, by which small blastomeres are pinched off toward the vegetal pole (precocious micromeres), was experimentally induced either by treatment with 4NQO (4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide) at the 2-cell stage or by continuous culture in Ca-free sea water. The precocious micromeres were cultured in vitro in natural sea water containing horse serum. Descendants of the precocious micromeres formed spicules. In comparison their spicule formation with that by the descendants of the micromere of normal embryo, no differences were found regarding 1) time of initiation of spicule formation, 2) rate of growth of spicule, 3) size and shape of resultant spicule and 4) percentage of clones which formed spicule. The fact indicates that factor(s) indispensable for self-differentiation into spicule-forming cells have already been localized near the vegetal pole as early as the 8-cell stage.

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