Identification and spatial distribution of retinoids in the developing chick limb bud

C Thaller, G Eichele - Nature, 1987 - nature.com
C Thaller, G Eichele
Nature, 1987nature.com
All-trans-retinoic acid (RA) induces striking digit pattern duplications when locally applied to
the developing chick limb bud1–4. Instead of the normal digit pattern (234) a mirror-
symmetrical 432234 pattern can be specified. Hence, RA closely mimics posterior limb bud
tissue (the zone of polarizing activity, ZPA) that causes very similar duplications when
grafted to an anterior site of a host limb bud5. This resemblance raises an intriguing
possibility: that RA is related to the as yet unidentified inducer substance thought to be …
Abstract
All-trans-retinoic acid (RA) induces striking digit pattern duplications when locally applied to the developing chick limb bud1–4. Instead of the normal digit pattern (234) a mirror-symmetrical 432234 pattern can be specified. Hence, RA closely mimics posterior limb bud tissue (the zone of polarizing activity, ZPA) that causes very similar duplications when grafted to an anterior site of a host limb bud5. This resemblance raises an intriguing possibility: that RA is related to the as yet unidentified inducer substance thought to be released by the ZPA1,6. Here we report that chick limb buds contain endogenous RA and we show that RA, but not its biosynthetic precursor retinol, forms a concentration gradient across the limb anlage with a high-point in the posterior domain of the limb bud, the part that also contains the ZPA.
nature.com