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Distribution of fibronectins and laminin in the early pig embryo

 

作者: Véronique Richoux,   Thierry Darribère,   Jean‐Claude Boucaut,   Jacques‐Edmond Flèchon,   Jean‐Paul Thiery,  

 

期刊: The Anatomical Record  (WILEY Available online 1989)
卷期: Volume 223, issue 1  

页码: 72-81

 

ISSN:0003-276X

 

年代: 1989

 

DOI:10.1002/ar.1092230111

 

出版商: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

AbstractFibronectins (FN) and laminin (LN) distributions were studied in the pig embryo by indirect immunofluorescence using antiporcine FN and antimurine LN antibodies.Extracellular FN are first detected in the early blastocyst before endodermal cell migration. They appear between the cells and on the blastocoelic face of the inner cell mass; thus, they are located at the interface of the trophectoderm and extraembryonic endoderm. Mesodermal cells migrate in a tridimensional network of fibrillar FN. These glycoproteins are also in the extraembryonic membranes (chorion and yolk sac wall) contiguous to the FN‐rich basement membranes of embryonic ectoderm and endoderm.Extracellular LN appears in the blastocyst when the endoderm is already established as a continuous cellular monolayer, and is located between the trophectoderm and the extraembryonic endoderm, which produces it. Laminin also accumulates at the basal surface of the embryonic ectoderm at the onset of gastrulation. In the extraembryonic membranes, LN appears at the interface of the endoderm and mesoderm and at the interface of the trophectoderm and mesoderm. It is produced and secreted by extraembryonic mesodermal cells.Analysis of the distribution of these glycoproteins suggests that FN allow the migration of endodermal and mesodermal cells by providing them with a suitable substrate. When these cells become immobilized, they synthesize LN, probably to stabilize their interactions with the underlying extracellular material and epitheli

 

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