Proliferating ability, morphological development and acetylcholinesterase activity of the neural tube cells in early chick embryos: An electron microscopic study

1982 
Using 3H-thymidine autoradiography and AChE histochemistry at the electron microscopic level on the same sections, the interrelationships between loss of proliferating ability, morphological development and increase of AChE activity during the course of differentiation of the neural tube cells were investigated in early chick embryos. The neural tube wall consisted of spindle-shaped cells with no AChE activity, weakly positive spindle-shaped cells showing AChE activity in the cisternae of the nuclear envelope and in a few short profiles of r-ER, moderately positive spindle-shaped cells showing AChE activity in the nuclear envelope and in a moderate number of r-ER profiles and intensely positive large round cells showing AChE activity in the nuclear envelope and in a large number of r-ER profiles. Nuclei of the AChE-negative, weakly positive and moderately positive cells were located in the ependymal layer (matrix). The AChE-intensely positive cells were in the mantle layer. The AChE-negative and weakly positive cells were capable of proliferation and were regarded as undifferentiated neuroepithelial cells. In contrast, the moderately positive and intensely positive cells were no longer capable of proliferation and were considered to be neurons. These findings indicate that the r-ER increases rapidly in amount and volume in newly formed neurons soon after their final cell division, and that AChE increases in the neurons in parallel to the development of the r-ER.
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