Abstract

Rat hind limb buds, aged between prenatal days 14 and 18, were used for electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry of fibronectin, laminin and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling staining indicative of DNA fragmentation. Fibronectin and laminin were actively synthesized in the rough endoplasmic reticulum of epidermal cells in the apical ectodermal ridge between prenatal days 14 and 15, but most cells underwent apoptosis after prenatal day 15. As the regression of the apical ectodermal ridge progressed, mesenchymal cells associated with the marginal veins were successively incorporated into the endothelium devoid of the basal lamina. No mitotic figures of endothelial cells were recognized either in the marginal vein or in the surrounding growing capillaries. Extracellular matrix components connected the adjacent mesenchymal cells, with the endothelium of such vessels immunoreacting to fibronectin and laminin. In addition, fibronectin-immunoreactive networks among the interstices of the mesenchymal cell cords developed in the avascular zone between the epidermis and the growing capillaries at prenatal day 15, but became inconspicuous at prenatal day 16. These results indicate that the apoptosis of the epidermal cells is the major reason for the regression of the apical ectodermal ridge, and that the capillary ingrowth from the marginal veins to the avascular zone is accelerated by transformation of mesenchymal cells to endothelial ones. Fibronectin and laminin seem to play crucial roles in capillary growth, especially in the adhesion between endothelial cells of the pre-existing vessels and mesenchymal cells.

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