Contribution of midbody channels to embryogenesis in the mouse
- 29 February 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Wilhelm Roux' Archiv für Entwicklungsmechanik der Organismen
- Vol. 197 (2), 110-114
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00375933
Abstract
We have examined the persistence of midbody channels during the second, third, and fourth cleavage cycles of the mouse using immunofluorescence to map the distribution of midbody microtubule bundles in intact embryos. Electron microscopy showed these bundles to be a characteristic feature of midbodies throughout the interphase period. In recently-divided embryos at each cleavage stage the number of midbodies was half the number of blastomeres, and declined towards zero as the next cleavage approached. This indicated to us that the only midbodies present in each stage were those which had arisen in the immediately-preceding division. Of those blastomeres which were in mitosis at the time of fixation, less than 4% were connected via a midbody to another blastomere, demonstrating that persistence of midbodies beyond a single cleavage cycle is a rare event. We conclude that midbody channels in our embryos are likely to connect only pairs of sister blastomeres because midbodies do not persist through multiple cleavage cycles. Midbody channels cannot, therefore, be regarded as providing extensive cell coupling in advance of the onset of gap junctional communication.Keywords
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