Abstract

The present study investigated the ontogeny of 3H-uridine incorporation into RNA as a measure for RNA synthesis in preimplantation porcine embryos from the two-cell stage up to the stage of the newly hatched blastocyst. A total of 568 embryos were cultured in vitro for 3 hr in medium (KRB plus lamb serum) containing 9 microM 3H-uridine. After disruption of cell membranes, RNA was isolated on DEAE cellulose filters, and the radioactivity was taken as a measure for the rate of RNA synthesis. No RNA synthesis was detected at the two-cell stage. From the four-cell to the morula stage, 3H-uridine incorporation per embryo increased about ninefold (P less than 0.001); in blastocyst stages, the increase between developmental stages was not statistically significant. Hatched blastocysts had the highest genomic activity. On a per cell basis, 3H-uridine incorporation was not different from the four-cell stage up to the zona pellucida-intact blastocyst and amounted to 0.29-0.37 fmol 3H-uridine incorporation/cell/3 hr. In hatched blastocysts, 3H-uridine incorporation per blastomere was increased (P less than 0.01 compared with younger stages) and amounted to 0.86 fmol 3H-uridine incorporation/cell/3 hr. It is concluded that 1) the rate of uridine incorporation depends on the cell stage in zona pellucida-intact porcine embryos and 2) uridine incorporation per blastomere is significantly increased in hatched blastocysts compared with earlier stages.

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