Abstract

Permeabilized eggs of Drosophila melanogaster were incubated in tritiated uridine, valine, and phenylalanine. The uptake and incorporation into TCA-insoluble material were measured by scintillation counting. There was very little incorporation of uridine before the blastoderm stage. At the blastoderm stage, the egg took up 2.4 pmoles/hr of uridine and incorporated 0.13 pmoles into RNA (assuming no dilution of specific activity of the precursor). The uptake of amino acids varied with the age of the embryo; virgin eggs synthesized about as much protein as fertilized eggs. Autoradiography of eggs incubated in uridine showed a lack of RNA synthesis in nuclei until the start of the blastoderm formation. The small amount of uridine incorporation before this stage was due to mitochondria. Incorporation of amino acids was uniform in the cytoplasm until the blastoderm; there was no incorporation by yolk granules. Regional difference in labeling appeared during gastrulation. The pole cells did not form RNA during the blastoderm stage, formation started during gastrulation. Protein labeling of the pole cells, on the contrary, was very strong in the blastoderm and early gastrula. These results indicate that the expression of zygotic genome before the blastoderm stage is unlikely.

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