Rotatio vegetalis est motus morphogeneticus qui internalizationem mesodermis per gastrulationem in embryonibus amphibiorum cogit.[1] Internalizatio cellularum vegetalium ante gastrulationem primum annis 1930 observata est ab Abrahamo Mandel Schechtman per experimenta pittaciorum tincturis affictorum in embryonibus Trituri torosi, speciei urodelorum familiae salamandridarum.[2] Winklbauer et Schürfeld (1999) motus internos per singula addita in explantationibus praegastularibus Xenopus laevis recentius descripserunt.[1]

Adumbratio motuum rotationis vegetalium.

Nexus interni

  1. 1.0 1.1 Winklbauer et Schürfeld 1999.
  2. Schechtman 1934.

Bibliographia

recensere
  • Gerhart, J., et R. Keller. 1986. Region-Specific Cell Activities in Amphibian Gastrulation. Annual Revire of Cell Biology 2:201-229.
  • Papan, C., B. Boulat, S. S. Velan, S. E. Fraser, et R. E. Jacobs. 2007. Formation of the dorsal marginal zone in Xenopus laevis analyzed by time-lapse microscopic magnetic resonance imaging. Developmental Biology 305:161-171.
  • Schechtman, A. M. 1934. Unipolar ingression in Triturus torosus: A hitherto undescribed movement in the pregastrular stages of a urodele. Univ. Calif. Pub. Zool. 39:303-310.
  • Winklbauer, R., et M. Schürfeld. 1999. Vegetal rotation, a new gastrulation movement involved in the internalization of the mesoderm and endoderm in Xenopus. Development 126:3703-3713.