生物
胚胎
细胞生物学
隐杆线虫病
干细胞
秀丽隐杆线虫
发育生物学
细胞分裂
孵化
卵裂球
形态发生
细胞
胚胎发生
遗传学
基因
生态学
作者
Uwe Deppe,Einhard Schierenberg,T. Cole,Christian Krieg,David Schmitt,Bonita L. Yoder,Gerald Ehrenstein
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.75.1.376
摘要
Embryogenesis of the free-living soil nematode Caenorhabditis elegans produces a juvenile having about 550 cells at hatching. We have determined the lineages of 182 cells by tracing the divisions of individual cells in living embryos. An invariant pattern of cleavage divisions of the egg generates a set of stem cells. These stem cells are the founders of six stem cell lineages. Each lineage has its own clock--i.e., an autonomous rhythm of synchronous cell divisions. The rhythms are maintained in spite of extensive cellular rearrangement. The rate and the orientation of the cell divisions of the cell lineages are essentially invariant among individuals. Thus, the destiny of cells seems to depend primarily on their lineage history. The anterior position of the site of origin of the stem cells in the egg relates to the rate of the cell cycle clock, suggesting intracellular preprogramming of the uncleaved egg. We used a technique that allows normal embryogenesis, from the fertilized egg to hatching, outside the parent under a cover glass. Embryogenesis was followed microscopically with Nomarski interference optics and high-resolution video recording.
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