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EFFECTS OF CHEMICAL REAGENTS ON THE CYCLIC CHANGES OF CORTEX AND CYTOPLASM IN THE ACTIVATED ENUCLEATED EGG‐FRAGMENTS OF THE SEA URCHIN *
Author(s) -
KOJIMA MANABU K.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
development, growth and differentiation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1440-169X
pISSN - 0012-1592
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-169x.1980.00415.x
Subject(s) - cytoplasm , sea urchin , cleavage (geology) , cytochalasin b , colcemid , hemicentrotus , microbiology and biotechnology , cytochalasin , cytochalasin d , biophysics , cortex (anatomy) , biology , centrifugation , chemistry , microtubule , anatomy , biochemistry , cytoskeleton , cell , paleontology , neuroscience , fracture (geology)
Unfertilized eggs of sea urchins. Anthocidaris crassispina and Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus , were separated by centrifugation into two fractions (nucleated light and enucleated heavy fragments). The enucleated egg‐fragments were activated by treatment with 1 M urea and then put into sea water solutions of the following three reagents; colcemid, cytochalasin B and Monogen at a concentration by which cleavage was suppressed. It was then examined whether the egg‐fragments can exhibit cyclic changes of cytoplasm and cortex in correlation with the cleavage cycle in normally fertilized eggs without any influence of nuclear activity. The results obtained clearly showed that colcemid can suppress the cyclic appearance of cytoplasmic changes, but not that of cortical changes; on the contrary, in cytochalasin B‐ and Monogen‐treated fragments, the periodicity in cortical activities is suppressed, while the periodic changes in the cytoplasm appear according to a timeschedule of the cleavage cycle. Therefore, it may be said that: 1) cyclic changes can occur in both the cytoplasm and the cortex independently, without the direct influence of nuclear activity; 2) if either of them is arrested, the cleavage does not take place; 3) the normal cleavage requires the simultaneous occurrence of periodic activities both in the cortex and in the cytoplasm after fertilization.

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