The origins of primitive blood in Xenopus: implications for axial patterning.

TitleThe origins of primitive blood in Xenopus: implications for axial patterning.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1999
AuthorsLane MC, Smith WC
JournalDevelopment
Volume126
Issue3
Pagination423-34
Date Published1999 Feb
ISSN0950-1991
KeywordsAnimals, Body Patterning, Dextrans, Embryonic Induction, Fluorescent Dyes, Green Fluorescent Proteins, Hematopoietic Stem Cells, In Situ Hybridization, Luminescent Proteins, Mesoderm, Morphogenesis, Rhodamines, Xenopus laevis
Abstract

The marginal zone in Xenopus laevis is proposed to be patterned with dorsal mesoderm situated near the upper blastoporal lip and ventral mesoderm near the lower blastoporal lip. We determined the origins of the ventralmost mesoderm, primitive blood, and show it arises from all vegetal blastomeres at the 32-cell stage, including blastomere C1, a progenitor of Spemann's organizer. This demonstrates that cells located at the upper blastoporal lip become ventral mesoderm, not solely dorsal mesoderm as previously believed. Reassessment of extant fate maps shows dorsal mesoderm and dorsal endoderm descend from the animal region of the marginal zone, whereas ventral mesoderm descends from the vegetal region of the marginal zone, and ventral endoderm descends from cells located vegetal of the bottle cells. Thus, the orientation of the dorsal-ventral axis of the mesoderm and endoderm is rotated 90( degrees) from its current portrayal in fate maps. This reassessment leads us to propose revisions in the nomenclature of the marginal zone and the orientation of the axes in pre-gastrula Xenopus embryos.

Alternate JournalDevelopment
PubMed ID9876172
Grant ListGM52835 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States