AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE PRoBLEM OF"CELL FORMATION FROM YOLK SPHERE"DURING THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CHICK EMBRYO II.ON THE FORMATION OF ENTODERM AND OF THE "COLUMNAR EPITHELIUM"OF GERM WALL AND YoLK SAC WALL
- VernacularTitle:鸡胚发育期中“细胞从卵黄球形成”问题的研究 II.内胚层和胚壁及卵黄囊壁上皮细胞的形成问题
- Author:
Sherpu SHIEH
;
Isen PU
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- From:
Acta Anatomica Sinica
1955;0(03):-
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
As an extension of previous investigations, the possibility of the yolk spheres of chick embryo developing into cells under normal and experimental conditions was studied in further detail. It was observed that the deeper cells of the early blastoderm made their morphological differentiation and gra- dually became separated by delamination from the superficial cells to form the primary entoderm; the yolk spheres that entered the subgerminal cavity, although located adjacent to or even intermingled with the deeper cells of the blastoderm, became disintegrated in later stages and did not take any part in the process of entoderm formation. The so-called "columnar epithelial cells" of the germ wall and of the yolk sac lining were not derived from the cells or the yolk spheres of that region, but were transformed from a structure of multinucleated syncytium, with the yolk sphere or granules in its meshes, which is histologically characteristic of the germ wall and the area vitellina interna of the yolk sac. They had an uncertain number of nuclei (from 1 to 3, or none at all) and an extraordinary large body size incomparable to any kind of embryonic cells (average 40-50? in length and 10-15? in diameter; the larger ones even reach 75-80? in length and 18? in diameter). The formation of these "cells" was found to be parallel with the expansion of the vitelline blood vessels along the yolk sac wall. Local cauterization indicated that outside the burned region in which the blood vessels were absent, the "columnar cells" failed to differentiate subsequently. The arrival of the blood vessels seems to induce the surrounding syncytial structure and yolk spheres to arrange themselves from an irregular state into long columns, and in such a way that the syncytial protoplasm and nuclei were moulded by the yolk spheres into a columnar structure, the so-called "columnar epithelial cells", but actually only a structure of syncytium. During this process, the yolk spheres underwent disintegration and liquefaction; some of them broke down into granules, droplets, and fragments of unequal sizes, with positive Feulgen's nuclear reaction. Some even showed an appearance of a pyknotic nucleus; but judging from their morphological detail and disintegration in the sucessive stages, they did not really show the characteristics of a nucleus. These results furnished further evidence that the yolk spheres of chick embryo could not develop into any kind of embryonic cell.