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. 1986;32(1):67-73.
doi: 10.1111/j.1432-0436.1986.tb00557.x.

The outgrowth of parietal endoderm from mouse teratocarcinoma stem-cell embryoid bodies

The outgrowth of parietal endoderm from mouse teratocarcinoma stem-cell embryoid bodies

L B Grabel et al. Differentiation. 1986.

Abstract

Teratocarcinoma stem cells can be used to study certain events occurring during early mouse embryogenesis. We report that the outgrowth of parietal endoderm from teratocarcinoma stem-cell embryoid bodies in vitro is analogous to the same process in vivo in terms of the spatial distribution of endoderm types: only parietal endoderm migrates away from the aggregate, whereas visceral endoderm remains associated with the embryoid body. The outgrowths generated on a substrate of type-I collagen from PSA-1 and retinoic-acid-treated F 9 embryoid bodies were found to be comparable, even though these aggregates express different endoderm types. We demonstrated that retinoic-acid-treated F 9 embryoid bodies that contain essentially only visceral endoderm in suspension culture can nonetheless generate parietal-endoderm outgrowth when plated on type-I collagen, suggesting that substrate interaction plays an important role in inducing parietal-endoderm differentiation. These data indicate the usefulness and relevance of studying endoderm differentiation and outgrowth in vitro employing the teratocarcinoma model system.

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