Presence of activin (erythroid differentiation factor) in unfertilized eggs and blastulae of Xenopus laevis

  1. M Asashima,
  2. H Nakano,
  3. H Uchiyama,
  4. H Sugino,
  5. T Nakamura,
  6. Y Eto,
  7. D Ejima,
  8. S Nishimatsu,
  9. N Ueno, and
  10. K Kinoshita
  1. Department of Biology, Yokohama City University, Japan.

Abstract

Activin A, a member of the transforming growth factor beta superfamily, has recently been found to have potent mesoderm-inducing activity on isolated early Xenopus animal-cap cells. We measured the activin activity of the Xenopus egg extract by using an erythroid-differentiating test with Friend leukemia cells. The results showed that an activin homologue is, indeed, contained in unfertilized eggs and blastulae of Xenopus laevis in a considerable amount. This activity was eluted at the same retention time as human activin A when fractionated by reversed-phase HPLC. Furthermore, the fraction containing erythroid-differentiating factor activity had mesoderm-inducing activity on Xenopus animal-cap cells. The mesoderm-inducing activity of this fraction was suppressed when coincubated with follistatin, an activin-binding protein. These results suggest that an endogenous activin may be a natural mesoderm-inducing factor acting in Xenopus embryogenesis.

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