Chick embryos were treated in ovo and in vitro with L-phenylalanine from the intermediate streak stage (Hamburger & Hamilton stage 3, 12–13 h of incubation) to the 7-somite stage (H&H stage 9, 29–33 h of incubation).

Treatment in ovo resulted in a large number of embryos developing somite blocks, i.e. imperfectly segmented somites. In embryos treated at an early developmental stage (12–21 h of incubation), the blocks of unsegmented somite mesoderm occurred mostly in the somite pairs 1–5, whereas treatment that began at a later stage (24–30 h of incubation) caused blocks in the somite pairs 5–10, i.e. the appearance of blocks of unsegmented somite mesoderm is correlated in time with the onset of the treatment. No difference regarding mitotic indices could be distinguished between normally segmented somites and blocks of unsegmented somite mesoderm. Autoradiography based on tritiated L-phenylalanine showed no regional differences in labelling of the chick embryo body. Electronmicroscopical observations indicate a slightly suppressed formation of microvilli in the cells of the unsegmented mesoderm blocks compared with cells in normally segmented somites. The observed disturbances are probably caused by a suppressed yolk granule decomposition in the developing somite cells.

The experiments in vitro support the findings in the in ovo material; at the same time, they reveal an unexpectedly slow diffusion of L-phenylalanine through the vitelline membrane.

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