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XB-ART-26668
Dev Biol 1989 Jul 01;1341:175-88. doi: 10.1016/0012-1606(89)90087-0.
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Hyperdorsoanterior embryos from Xenopus eggs treated with D2O.

Scharf SR , Rowning B , Wu M , Gerhart JC .


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Excessively dorsalized embryos of Xenopus laevis develop from eggs treated with 30-70% D2O for a few minutes within the first third of the cell cycle following fertilization. As the concentration of D2O and the duration of exposure are increased, the anatomy of these embryos shifts in the direction of enlarged dorsal and anterior structures and reduced ventral and posterior ones. Twinning of dorsoanterior structures is frequent. Intermediate forms include embryos with large heads but no trunks or tails. The limit form of the series has cylindrical symmetry, with circumferential bands of eye pigment and cement gland, a core of notochord-like tissue, and a centrally located beating heart. D2O treatment seems to increase the egg's sensitivity to the dorsalizing effects of cortical rotation and to stimulate the egg to initiate two or more directions of rotation. Such eggs probably establish thereafter a widened and/or duplicated Nieuwkoop center in the vegetal hemisphere, with the subsequent induction of a widened and/or duplicated Spemann organizer region in the marginal zone, which leads to excessive dorsal development. The existence of these anatomical forms indicates the potential of the egg to undertake dorsal development at all positions of its circumference and suggests that normal patterning depends on the limited and localized activation or disinhibition of this widespread potential.

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