Abstract

Undiluted blood serum of various species was used to culture two-celled rabbit ova for 24 hours. It was found that there is an ovocidal factor present in the serum of man, sheep, cattle, goat, and fowl. The factor is lethal rather than inhibitory; exposure to it for 10 minutes will cause the death of the ova. This factor is unstable, thermolabile (destroyed at 55 degrees C. in 30 minutes), and of large molecular size. The strength or concentration of this factor varies according to the origin of the serum, increasing in the order man, sheep, cattle, goat, fowl. The blood serum of rabbit, horse, dog, guinea pig, rat, and pig contains no ovocidal factor against rabbit ova. The ovocidal factor differs from the spermicidal factor, which is present in all the sera of the different species studied with rabbit spermatozoa. Immunization of the guinea pig against rabbit ova is possible. Normal development of young rabbits was obtained by transplantation of ova cultured in the heated or normal serum of other species after 24 hours.

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