Effect of length of aggregation time upon sorting-out behavior of cells from chick embryo tissues
- 1 September 1974
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Wilhelm Roux' Archiv für Entwicklungsmechanik der Organismen
- Vol. 174 (3) , 252-259
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00573229
Abstract
The timing hypothesis of Curtis proposes that cells which go through a sequence of types of behavior at different rates sort out from one another in aggregates. In order to further test this hypothesis we have given cells from one chick embryo tissue a head start in aggregating before adding cells from a second tissue. By such experimental manipulation the normal position of cells in an aggregate should be reversed, according to predictions from the timing hypothesis. When heart ventricle cells were allowed to aggregate 6,12, 20, or 22 hours before addition of neural retina cells, the aggregates all showed internal heart cells surrounded by neural retina cells. The same final positions of heart and neural retina were found in aggregates in which neural retina cells started aggregating 4, 6, or 22 hours before addition of heart cells. Control aggregates, with heart and neural retina dissociated and co-aggregated simultaneously, also showed heart internal and neural retina external. No effect of length of aggregation time could be detected with this pair of tissues. When pigmented retina cells were allowed to aggregate 6 or 20 hours before addition of heart cells, the cells were in the same final positions as in control aggregates, namely heart external and most pigmented retina cells internal. The only position reversal occurred when heart cells were given 6 or 20 hours to aggregate before addition of pigmented retina cells, which now took up all external positions. This position reversal could result from the heart cells becoming more adhesive with time in culture.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Further evidence for a developmental change in morphogenetic properties of embryonic chick heart cellsJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1974
- Developmental change in morphogenetic properties: Embryonic chick heart tissue and cells segregate from other tissues in age‐dependent patternsJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1973
- Experimental modulation of intercellular cohesiveness: Reversal of tissue assembly patternsDevelopmental Biology, 1972
- Reversal of tissue position after cell sortingDevelopmental Biology, 1972
- Light and electron microscope studies of cell sorting in combinations of chick embryo neural retina and retinal pigment epitheliumWilhelm Roux' Archiv für Entwicklungsmechanik der Organismen, 1971
- Does differential adhesion govern self‐assembly processes in histogenesis? Equilibrium configurations and the emergence of a hierarchy among populations of embryonic cellsJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1970
- Pattern and Mechanism in the Reaggregation of SpongesNature, 1962
- Mechanism of Tissue Reconstruction by Dissociated Cells, II: Time-Course of EventsScience, 1962
- Timing mechanisms in the specific adhesion of cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1961
- Rotation-mediated histogenetic aggregation of dissociated cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1961