Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Robert Briggs is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Robert Briggs.


Developmental Biology | 1960

Nuclear transplantation studies on the early gastrula (Rana pipiens): I. Nuclei of presumptive endoderm☆

Robert Briggs; Thomas J. King

Abstract Previously published studies showed that the nuclear changes associated with endodermal differentiation are well advanced at the late gastrula stage in Rana pipiens . In the present investigation an attempt was made to determine when in development this process of nuclear “differentiation” begins. Presumptive endoderm nuclei from the vegetal pole region of early gastrulae were tested by transplantation into enucleated eggs. For comparison, control transfers were performed with nuclei from the undetermined animal pole region of blastulae. The recipient eggs developed as follows: 1. 1. Cleavage: Control and experimental transfers gave about the same results. Approximately 60% of the transfers in each series led to the formation of complete blastulae. 2. 2. Embryonic differentiation: Eighty per cent of the complete blastulae resulting from the control transfers developed normally to larval stages. In the case of the transfers of presumptive endoderm nuclei, 52% of the blastulae developed normally. The majority of the remaining embryos displayed abnormalities in postneurula stages and failed to attain the larval stage. A few of these abnormal embryos (5) showed extreme deficiencies in the ectodermal derivatives. In the majority, however, the deficiencies were not related to the endodermal origin of the nuclei in any obvious fashion. 3. 3. Larval development: All embryos which passed through the embryonic stages normally were reared until they died or reached metamorphosis. In their larval development the nuclear-transplant animals did not differ from their normally fertilized controls. A possible exception to this conclusion is mentioned on page 261. The results summarized above are compared with those previously obtained by us in transplantation studies on nuclei from older donors; and with the results of experiments on Xenopus laevis nuclei recently reported by Fischberg et al. , 1958.


Developmental Biology | 1962

Nuclear transplantation in the axolotl

Jacques Signoret; Robert Briggs; Rufus Richard Humphrey

Abstract There are currently available in the axolotl several genes that affect development at times ranging from cleavage to larval stages. These genes would be extremely useful as markers in nuclear transplantation studies of nuclear differentiation. It is also possible that by the use of such genes the analysis of nuclear differentiation might eventually be refined to detect changes in the genes themselves, if they occur. In the past the exploitation of the axolotl material for work of this type has not been feasible because axolotl eggs, like those of other urodeles, have generally given very poor results in nuclear transplantation experiments. The present paper presents an analysis of the factors which determine whether or not nuclear transfers succeed in this species. This analysis shows that the conditions required for the transfers to be successful are: (1) activation of the egg by heat shock (35° C for 5 minutes)7; (2) enucleation by ultraviolet irradiation; and (3) nuclear transfer at 2 to 4 hours following the application of the heat shock. A method based on this analysis is described in detail on pages 151–154. Tests of the method were made by transplanting blastula nuclei into activated and enucleated eggs. Ninety-six per cent of the eggs cleaved and 77% developed into complete blastulae of normal appearance. The majority of these blastulae (66%) developed to postneurula stages. The validity of the method was tested by transplanting nuclei carrying the dominant gene D (for black pigmentation pattern) into enucleated eggs from a recessive white (dd) female. A total of 37 larvae were obtained. All showed the black phenotype, proving that the nuclear transfers were successful.


Developmental Biology | 1964

TRANSPLANTATION OF NUCLEI OF VARIOUS CELL TYPES FROM NEURULAE OF THE MEXICAN AXOLOTL (AMBYSTOMA MEXICANUM).

Robert Briggs; Jacques Signoret; Rufus Richard Humphrey

Abstract Nuclei from various regions of axolotl neurulae were transplanted into eggs which had previously been electrically activated and irradiated with UV to eliminate the egg chromosomes. The majority of the nuclei, regardless of their region of origin, elicited genuine cleavage but usually failed to promote development beyond blastula or early gastrula stages. A cytological study of the recipient embryos, fixed at various times following nuclear transfer, has revealed pronounced mitotic abnormalities in approximately 90% of the cases examined. Modifications of the transplantation medium, calculated to reduce the risk of technical damage to the nuclei, do not improve their capacity to promote the development of the recipient eggs. Triploid neurula nuclei do not differ from diploid nuclei in ability to promote the development of test eggs. Nuclei from the most recently differentiated (caudal) end of the notochord and endoderm, compared with nuclei from the more cephalic regions of the same structures, display a greater capacity to promote postgastrula development of the recipient eggs. The Discussion is focused mainly on the mitotic abnormalities exhibited by the majority of the transplanted somatic nuclei. The evidence at hand suggests that these abnormalities are expressions of a differentiated state of the nuclei, affecting their capacity to proceed normally through mitosis following transfer into egg cytoplasm. However, their exact mode of origin, and the problems they pose in the interpretation of nuclear transplantation experiments, remain to be worked out.


Developmental Biology | 1962

Studies on the maternal effect of the semilethal gene, v, in the Mexican axolotl. I. Influence of temperature on the expression of the effect. II. Cytological changes in the affected embryos.

Robert Briggs; Rufus Richard Humphrey

Abstract The gene, v , in the Mexican axolotl has recently been shown to affect the egg cytoplasm during oogenesis in such a way as to lead to abnormalities in development following fertilization. Affected embryos frequently are arrested in blastula stages and display a remarkable appearance resulting from a stratification of the contents of the blastomeres. Or they may continue to later stages before the maternal effect becomes apparent ( Humphrey, 1962 ). The present paper is concerned with the influence of temperature on the expression of this maternal effect and with the cytological changes occurring in the affected embryos. The influence of temperature on the maternal effect was investigated by rearing the embryos at 25° C and at 14–20° C. (Both temperatures are well within the range permitting normal development of control eggs.) At 25° a large majority (88%) of the embryos were arrested in mid-blastula stages and exhibited a striking appearance due to a stratification of the contents of the blastomeres. At lower temperatures (14–20°) the expression of the maternal effect was delayed. Less than 1% of the embryos were arrested in mid-blastula stages. Approximately 70% developed to gastrula and neurula stages and 30% to more advanced embryonic stages. Stratification of cell contents was observed in the gastrulae and some neurulae but was less pronounced than that seen in arrested blastulae. The maternal effect results in a striking rearrangement of cell components in embryos arrested in blastula and gastrula stages. The first cytologically detectable change consists in a concentration of the RNA-containing cytoplasm into the upper (animal) parts of the cells. Nuclei are similarly displaced from their normal central location and are found in the upper parts of the cells, wholly or partly within the RNA-containing cytoplasm. These changes in the distribution of nuclei and of cytoplasmic RNA are followed by a sedimentation of yolk platelets and then of pigment granules. Eventually the cells take on a highly stratified appearance. For a time after the beginning of the cytoplasmic stratification the nuclei continue mitotic activity which, however, is usually of an abnormal type. The most common abnormality (at 25°) is an extensive polyploidization, indicating that chromosomal replication continues for a time after nuclear and cell division have been suppressed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1952

Transplantation of living nuclei from blastula cells into enucleated frogs’ eggs

Robert Briggs; Thomas J. King


Journal of Morphology | 1957

Changes in the nuclei of differentiating endoderm cells as revealed by nuclear transplantation

Robert Briggs; Thomas J. King


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 1956

Serial Transplantation of Embryonic Nuclei

Thomas J. King; Robert Briggs


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 1951

An investigation of the capacity for cleavage and differentiation in Rana pipiens eggs lacking “functional” chromosomes†

Robert Briggs; Elizabeth Ufford Green; Thomas J. King


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 1953

Factors affecting the transplantability of nuclei of frog embryonic cells

Robert Briggs; Thomas J. King


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1955

CHANGES IN THE NUCLEI OF DIFFERENTIATING GASTRULA CELLS, AS DEMONSTRATED BY NUCLEAR TRANSPLANTATION

Thomas J. King; Robert Briggs

Collaboration


Dive into the Robert Briggs's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rufus Richard Humphrey

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jacques Signoret

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francoise Briggs

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hae-Moon Chung

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. T. Justus

Indiana University Bloomington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge