Abstract

The presumptive primordial germ cell (pPGC) number with development after the cleavage stage and the fate of pPGCs damaged by uv irradiation were studied in successive Epon sections (0.5 μm thick) with the light microscope in both uv-irradiated and unirradiated Xenopus embryos. taking survival rate and sterility into consideration. The pPGCs of the uv-irradiated embryos occupy nearly the same location in the embryos as those of the unirradiated embryos at stages 12, 17, 23, and 28 [see Ikenishi, K., and Kotani, M. (1975). Develop. Growth Different. 17, 101–110 ]. At stage 33 34 they are found in the central part of the endoderm cell mass in the uv-irradiated embryos, while they are situated in the lateral or dorsal part of the endoderm cell mass in the unirradiated. In the uv-irradiated embryos, a cavity which was never found in the unirradiated embryos was observed in the endoderm cell mass beneath the archenteron cavity and in the almost-median part of the posterior endoderm cell mass at stages 17 and 23, respectively, and some vacuoles in pPGCs as well as in somatic cells around those pPGCs were noticed at stages 17– 33 34 . The number of pPGCs of the unirradiated enbryos increases about three- or fourfold during stages 12–46, while the pPGCs of the uv-irradiated embryos slowly increase in number from stage 17 to stage 28, indicating that the division occurs in pPGCs, then decrease with development and finally disappear from the tadpole.

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