Publication | Open Access
Surface antigen in early differentiation.
237
Citations
13
References
1977
Year
Embryo CultureOocyteDevelopmental BiologyGerm CellPathogenesisImmunologyFab FragmentsMorphogenesisAntigen ProcessingCompact MorulaeDevelopmental ImmunologyEmbryonic DevelopmentImmune SystemMedicineCell BiologyRabbit AntiserumSurface AntigenEmbryology
Addition of Fab fragments from rabbit antiserum to surface antigen F9 to 2-cell stage mouse embryos in culture does not alter cleavage; however, the addition prevents culture does not alter cleavage; however, the addition prevents the formation of compact morulae and blastocysts. A similar effect is observed when Fab fragments are added to already compact 8-cell stage or even older morulae, but disappears at the beginning of blastocoel formation. This effect is reversible: uncompact 30-cell embryos washed free of Fab become compact in a few hours, produce blastocysts, and upon reimplantation into pseudopregnant mothers can produce mice. Development is not altered by divalent anti-F9 antibodies, by Fab fragments from sera directed against other embryo surface antigens, or by succinyl concanavalin A.
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