“…Not only do the cellular changes associated with cleavage and the subsequent growth of the embryo require the assembly of new intracellular and plasma membranes (Calarco & Brown, 1969) but striking qualitative changes in the properties of embryonic membranes also occur during crucial transitions in early development. For example, compaction of the morula leads to polarization of cells (Ducibella, Albertini, Anderson & Biggers, 1975;Ducibella, Ukena, Karnovsky & Anderson, 1977), generating zonular tight junctions around the periphery of the embryo and establishing inter¬ cellular contact between internal cells, an arrangement which may be very important for the sub¬ sequent differentiation of the embryo (discussed by Johnson, Handyside & Braude, 1977;Johnson, 1979). Modulations in the organization of intracellular and plasma membranes can also be inferred from variations in surface antigen expression (Edidin, 1976), changes in mitochondrial morphology and membrane-bound enzyme activity (Biggers & Borland, 1976) as well as the transition from Na+-dependent to Na+-independent amino acid transport (Borland & Tasca, 1974) and localized activity of Na+-K+ ATPase during accumulation of blastocoelic fluid (Biggers, Borland & Powers, 1977).…”