Abstract
While it has been known for some time that transplants of anterior lobe of the pituitary of adult frogs would cause accelerated growth in small tadpoles 1 no attempt has been made to show the relation of this gland to the condition of partial neoteny existing in some anurans. Neotenic amphibians exhibit prolonged retention of larval form. Total neoteny, of which the Mexican axolotl is an example, is characterized by the failure of such animals to metamorphose spontaneously. Among the anurans Rana catesbiana and Rana clamata show greatly prolonged larval stages which mark them as partially neotenic types. In the totally neotenic axolotl, metamorphosis upon injection of anterior lobe extracts has been reported by some workers 2 , 3 and denied by others. 4
The anterior lobe of adult Rana pipiens was transplanted intraperitoneally into Rana clamata larvae of various stages of limb development—up to a hind-limb length of 5 mm. Three transplants were made at weekly intervals into 35 tadpoles, allotted according to size into cultures of 5. Controls of approximately the same development were injected into bits of muscle. After the 2nd transplant marked limb growth was noted; the general growth being accelerated to any extent only in the smaller tadpoles.
After the 12th day following the first transplantation marked metamorphic signs appeared, and in from 25 to 33 days forelimbs began to break through and tail atrophy was observed. Most of the experimental animals were killed when they showed practically complete metamorphosis and the thyroids removed for examination. The control animals exhibited only a slight normal growth and development and in no case showed any signs of metamorphosis.
Pronounced development of the thyroids of the treated animals was found—in some cases their diameter was twice that of the control glands. Sections of the control glands displayed large, colloid-filled follicles with walls composed of flat, inactive-appearing cells. The thyroid of treated animals, on the other hand, showed considerable loss of colloid substance from the follicles with collapse of some of the latter, and extreme activity of the cells which were greatly elongated, with proportionate thickening of the follicle walls. Freeing of colloid and heightened activity were evidently effects of the anterior lobe transplants.
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