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Published September 1965 | Published
Journal Article Open

Evidence for prelocalization of cytoplasmic factors affecting gene activation in early embryogenesis

Abstract

Differentiation begins early in embryogenesis as different genes become active in different cells. Within the closed system of the early embryo, equal genomes thus direct the creation of diverse cell types. Though the nuclei of these cells contain complete copies of the same genome,(1,2) the nucleoplasmic and cytoplasmic environments of these genomes are not the same, as a result of the distribution of cleavage nuclei into diverse areas of egg cytoplasm early in the cleavage process. In some cases the fate of these nuclei, i.e., the type of differentiated cell to which they or their descendants give rise, has been seen to depend on the area of cytoplasm in which they come to lie.

Additional Information

© 1965 by the National Academy of Sciences. Communicated June 14, 1965. We are indebted to Dr. Jack Collier for his invaluable advice and assistance. This research was supported in part by the American Cancer Society (grant E-334) and by the U.S. Public Health Service (grant GM 04919).

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August 21, 2023
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