Pierce G B, Arechaga J, Jones A, Lewellyn A, Wells R S
Differentiation. 1987;33(3):247-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1432-0436.1987.tb01564.x.
Double-labeled embryonal-carcinoma (ECa) cells were injected into blastocysts or incorporated into blastocysts by aggregation, and their fate after various periods of time in culture was investigated. ECa-247 cells labeled with fluorescent microscopheres were easily identified in whole blastocysts. These blastocysts were embedded in plastic, serially sectioned, and prepared for autoradiography. The 3H-thymidine label on the embryonal-carcinoma cells allowed precise localization of the cancer-derived cells. ECa-247 cells preferentially localized in the mural trophectoderm, with a few being seen in primitive endoderm and, even more rarely, in the inner cell mass. Selected autoradiograms were re-embedded and thin sectioned for transmission electron microscopy. The cancer-derived cells were found to have differentiated in accordance with their localization.