Abstract

Pairs of nucleate and non-nucleate fragments prepared by manually bisecting unfertilized eggs of Clypeaster japonicus were inseminated to obtain a pair of egg fragments, one with a diploid nucleus (zygote) and the other with a male pronucleus (merogone). Haploid male pronuclei in the merogone always entered the first mitosis (NEB) later than the zygote partner. The delay in NEB ranged from 6 to 24 min in different pairs. The interval from the first NEB to formations of the karyomere and the cleavage furrow, and the durations of the second, third and fourth cell cycles were identical in the zygote-merogone pairs. Observations of Colcemid-treated eggs suggested that the duration of the first DNA synthetic period was prolonged in the merogone. From this observation of wide variation in the time of the first mitosis, in contrast to constant durations of subsequent mitotic intervals, we suppose that some critical event triggers the transition of development for the start of well-ordered sequences in the mitotic cycle in sea urchin development.

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