THE INFLUENCE OF GROWTH-INHIBITING AND GROWTH-PROMOTING MEDIUM CONDITIONS ON CRYSTALLIN ACCUMULATION IN TRANSDIFFERENTIATING CULTURES OF EMBRYONIC CHICK NEURAL RETINA
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Development, Growth & Differentiation
- Vol. 22 (1) , 49-60
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-169x.1980.00049.x
Abstract
The effects of media containing undialysed serum (controls) or dialysed serum with or without ascorbic acid, were compared during the second half of the 41-day culture period in embryonic chick neural retina cultures, which had all been grown in control medium prior to 19 days. Conditions permitting greatest culture growth (controls) showed earlier and more extensive development of lentoids, greater accumulation of total crystallin and a higher proportion of δ relative to α+β crystallins. Conditions allowing least culture growth (dialysed serum) gave converse results throughout. Thus changes in culture growth rate apparently affect δ crystallin production more than α or β crystallin production. Insulin promotes growth in neural retina cultures, whether present throughout the culture period (in this case 31 days), or only from 18 days onwards. The frequency and survival of putative neuronal cell aggregates are both increased by insulin during the first 18 days of culture. Delta crystallin production during subsequent transdifferentiation is selectively promoted by insulin when present throughout, but this effect is largely obviated when insulin is present only from 18 days onwards. This anomaly could arise through percursor cell selection during the earlier phases of culture, since it is possible that some (not all) lentoids may be derived from aggregates of neuronal-like cells in neural retina cultures. Thus precursor cell selection as well as culture growth rate may influence the pattern of crystallin production during transdifferentiation.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- EFFECTS OF CULTURE MEDIA ON THE "FOREIGN" DIFFERENTIATION OF LENS AND PIGMENT CELLS FROM NEURAL RETINA IN VITRODevelopment, Growth & Differentiation, 1977
- The control of δ-crystallin gene expression during lens cell development: Dissociation of cell elongation, cell division, δ-crystallin synthesis, and δ-crystallin mRNA accumulationDevelopmental Biology, 1977
- EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATION OF ALTERNATIVE PATHWAYS OF DIFFERENTIATION IN CULTURES OF EMBRYONIC CHICK NEURAL RETINADevelopment, Growth & Differentiation, 1976
- Enhancement of differentiation of lens and pigment cells by ascorbic acid in cultures of neural retinal cells of chick embryosDevelopmental Biology, 1976
- Protein Synthesis and its Regulation in the Lenses of Normal Chicks and in two Strains of Chicks with Hyperplasia of the Lens EpitheliumPublished by Springer Nature ,1976
- A hemagglutination inhibition technique for detection of immunoglobulins in supernatants of human lymphoblastoid cell linesCell, 1974
- The antigenic structure of chick β-crystallin subunitsExperimental Eye Research, 1974
- Differentiation of Lens Tissue from the Progeny of Chick Retinal Pigment Cells Cultured In Vitro : A Demonstration of a Switch of Cell Types in Clonal Cell CultureProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1973
- Chapter 5 Problems of Differentiation in the Vertebrate LensPublished by Elsevier ,1970
- Changes in chick lens proteins with aging: Paper from the symposium “lens proteins and related subjects,” Ghent, Belgium, June 1967Experimental Eye Research, 1968