Abstract

Regeneration blastemas at the stages of medium bud and palette were transplanted to contralateral limb stumps so that either their anterior and posterior positions or their dorsal and ventral positions were apposed to those of the stumps. Grafts were shifted from distal levels to proximal levels, or from proximal levels to distal levels, or remained at either a proximal or a distal level. When anterior and posterior positions of graft and stump were apposed, supernumerary limbs were produced at the graft-stump junction in anterior and posterior positions relative to the stump. All analyzable supernumerary limbs were of stump handedness. Apposition of dorsal and ventral positions of graft and stump led to the formation of supernumerary limbs at dorsal and ventral positions relative to stump tissues. All analyzable supernumerary limbs were once again of stump handedness. Shifts from distal levels to proximal levels never resulted in skeletal deletions, as potential deletions in the proximal-distal axis were always filled in. Shifts from proximal levels to distal levels resulted in a low frequency of serial duplications. The results are discussed in view of a recently presented formal model for pattern regulation in epimorphic fields.

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