Abstract

In many organisms oocytes contain dark-staining material, termed nuage, that is concentrated at one pole of the oocyte cytoplasm and that influences the further development of the oocyte after fertilization. In mammalian oocytes, ultrastructural studies have detected small patches of nuage-like material, but thus far no nuage-rich zone of polar cytoplasm has been reported. Here, we report that when large sections of rat ovary embedded in methacrylate resin are stained with toluidine blue and surveyed, many oocytes contain a narrow, sharply defined, basophilic zone of polar cytoplasm that appears analogous to the polar cytoplasm of Xenopus and other non-mammalian species. This basophilic polar cytoplasm was common in multilaminar follicles and was not visible in smaller, primordial follicles. In one out of five oocytes stimulated with hCG to complete the first meiotic division, a relatively faint region of cortical basophilia was detectable. Further studies will be needed to ascertain if this nuage-like material has an influence upon the development of oocytes similar to that seen in non-mammalian species.

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