Analysis of coat-color patterns in aggregation chimeras between BALB/cA and C3H/HeN mice with special reference to migratory patterns and clone number of epidermal melanoblasts

Abstract
Chimeras provide unique opportunities to study interactions between the phenotypically similar but genotypically allogeneic cell populations during embryogenesis in vivo. From the quantitative analysis of coat‐color patterns in C3H/HeN↔BALB/cA chimeras, a model was proposed stating that the aggregability of the C3H/ HeN‐derived melanoblasts in the chimeras was inversely related to the ratio between the mean free path of the epidermal melanoblasts in the normal C3H/He N mouse and that in the chimeras. As a corollary, the possibility was suggested that during the migration of melanoblasts, mechanisms identical with or similar to contact inhibition of movement might operate after collision between the isogeneic, but not between the allogeneic melanoblasts. With regard to the number of melanoblast clones in the trunk region of the mouse, the present series of analyses yielded the value of 24–28 arranged unilaterally; the value closely approximated the number of the somites in that region and provided further support for the proposition made earlier by Tachi [Dev Genet 9:121–154, 1988; “Development of Preimplantation Embryos and Their Environment.” New York: Alan R. Liss, Inc., 1989, pp 263–274].