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Developmental basis of pronephric defects in Xenopus body plan phenotypes

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UNSPECIFIED (1999) Developmental basis of pronephric defects in Xenopus body plan phenotypes. DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 215 (2). pp. 233-242. ISSN 0012-1606

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Abstract

We have used monoclonal antibodies that recognize the pronephric tubules or pronephric duet to explore the induction of the embryonic kidney in developing Xenopus embryos. Morphogenesis of the pronephros was examined in UV-ventralized and lithium-dorsalized embryos. We find that the pronephric tubules are present in all but the strongest UV-induced phenotypes, but absent from relatively moderate lithium phenotypes. Interestingly the pronephric duct, which develops from the ventroposterior portion of the pronephric anlage, is missing from more of the mild UV phenotypes than are pronephric tubules. The loss of the capacity to form pronephroi in UV-ventralized embryos is caused by the loss of tissues capable of inducing the pronephric mesoderm, as marginal zone explants from ventralized embryos are still competent to respond to pronephric-inductive signals. Explant recombination experiments indicate that the tissue responsible for both the loss of pronephroi in UV-ventralized embryos and the induction of pronephroi during normal development is the anterior somites. The absence of pronephroi in relatively mild lithium phenotypes has a developmental basis different from that of the UV phenotype, as explants from lithium-treated embryos are effective inducers of pronephroi in recombinants with competent mesoderm, even though they themselves do not form pronephroi in isolation. Together these data indicate that dorsal tissues, especially the anterior somites, are responsible for the establishment of the intermediate mesoderm and the induction of the embryonic kidneys and that even mild dorsalization destroys the capacity to form cells competent to receive this signal. (C) 1999 Academic Press.

Item Type: Journal Article
Subjects: Q Science > QH Natural history > QH301 Biology
Journal or Publication Title: DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Publisher: ACADEMIC PRESS INC
ISSN: 0012-1606
Date: 15 November 1999
Volume: 215
Number: 2
Number of Pages: 10
Page Range: pp. 233-242
Publication Status: Published
URI: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/id/eprint/14001

Data sourced from Thomson Reuters' Web of Knowledge

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