Inability of Mouse Blastomere Nuclei Transferred to Enucleated Zygotes to Support Development in Vitro
- 14 December 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 226 (4680) , 1317-1319
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.6542249
Abstract
More than 90 percent of enucleated one-cell mouse embryos receiving pronuclei from other one-cell embryos successfully develop to the blastocyst stage in vitro. In this investigation, nuclei from successive preimplantation cleavage stages were introduced into enucleated one-cell embryos and the embryos were tested for development in vitro. Although two-cell nuclei supported development to the morula or blastocyst stage, four-cell, eight-cell, and inner cell mass cell nuclei did not. The inability of cell nuclei from these stages to support development reflects rapid loss of totipotency of the transferred nucleus and is not the result of simultaneous transfer of membrane or cytoplasm.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Activation of Dormant Genes in Specialized CellsScience, 1984
- Maternal Thp lethality in the mouse is a nuclear, not cytoplasmic, defectNature, 1984
- Nuclear Transplantation in the Mouse Embryo by Microsurgery and Cell FusionScience, 1983
- Poly(A) length, cytoplasmic adenylation and synthesis of poly(A)+ RNA in early mouse embryosDevelopmental Biology, 1983
- GENETIC CONTROL OF VERY EARLY MAMMALIAN DEVELOPMENTBiological Reviews, 1981
- THE MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BASIS OF PREIMPLANTATION MOUSE DEVELOPMENTBiological Reviews, 1981
- The fate of inner cell mass and trophectoderm nuclei transplanted to fertilized mouse eggsNature, 1981
- Nuclear transplantation in mus musculus: Developmental potential of nuclei from preimplantation embryosCell, 1981
- On the nature of the restricted differentiation‐promoting ability of transplanted Rana pipiens nuclei from differentiating endoderm cellsJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1965
- Adult frogs derived from the nuclei of single somatic cellsDevelopmental Biology, 1962