Abstract

AbstractZona‐free hamster eggs have been fertilized in vitro with boar spermatozoa in a medium enriched by arginine‐3H and the sites of localization of newly synthesized arginine‐3H–labeled proteins have been investigated using fine‐structure autoradiography. It was confirmed that such proteins are synthesized during fertilization and that they accumulate to a notable degree in decondensing sperm chromatin as well as in the chromatin of the female pronucleus and also of the second polar body. A similar process did evidently take place also in defective pronuclei, characterized by a core of a still condensed chromatin and by remaining nuclear membrane. In such male pronuclei the highest concentration of the label was seen just on the border of the condensed chromatin, on the expected site of nuclear protein exchange. It is supposed that, at least in this experimental system, any morphologically detectable sperm decondensation is accompanied immediately by a shift from sperm basic nuclear proteins to other nuclear proteins.

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