Graded changes in dose of a Xenopus activin A homologue elicit stepwise transitions in embryonic cell fate
- 27 September 1990
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 347 (6291), 391-394
- https://doi.org/10.1038/347391a0
Abstract
The protein XTC-MIF, a Xenopus homologue of activin A and a potent mesoderm-inducing factor, can induce responding animal pole explants to form several different cell types in a dose-dependent manner, higher doses eliciting more dorso-anterior tissues. This graded response, characteristic of classically postulated morphogens, may underlie pattern formation, but the response of intact animal caps to XTC-MIF provides only a crude indication of trends. Here we report the effects of XTC-MIF on dispersed blastomeres rather than intact animal caps. Under these conditions, responding cells distinguish sharply between doses of pure XTC-MIF differing by less than 1.5-fold. Two different response thresholds have been found, defining three cell states. This suggests that XTC-MIF has an instructive effect. Notochord and muscle are both induced in the same narrow dose-range. Mixing treated with untreated cells does not seem to shift the dose thresholds, showing that at least some cells can stably record the received dose of inducing factor.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Activin-like factor from a Xenopus laevis cell line responsible for mesoderm inductionNature, 1990
- Identification of a potent Xenopus mesoderm-inducing factor as a homologue of activin ANature, 1990
- Induction and early amphibian developmentCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1989
- Interaction between peptide growth factors and homoeobox genes in the establishment of antero-posterior polarity in frog embryosNature, 1989
- Clonal analysis of mesoderm induction in Xenopus laevisDevelopmental Biology, 1989
- Signals from the dorsal blastopore lip region during gastrulation bias the ectoderm toward a nonepidermal pathway of differentiation in Xenopus laevisDevelopmental Biology, 1989
- The bicoid protein is a positive regulator of hunchback transcription in the early Drosophila embryoNature, 1989
- A community effect in animal developmentNature, 1988
- The bicoid protein determines position in the Drosophila embryo in a concentration-dependent mannerCell, 1988
- A homeobox-containing marker of posterior neural differentiation shows the importance of predetermination in neural inductionCell, 1987