Abstract

Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity was measured in individual preimplantation rabbit and mouse embryos. Substrate turnover by the enzyme is at least 30 times greater than glucose oxidation by the pentose shunt in the early rabbit embryo. There was no evidence during the preimplantation period of the embryos in either species of a bimodal distribution of G6PD activities among the embryos. Since cytological studies have not shown that inactivation of the X chromosome occurs during the early cleavage period and G6PD activity is sex-linked and gene-dose dependent in most higher animals, the evidence from the enzyme studies suggests that there is little or no synthesis of G6PD during the early preimplantation period. It is suggested that the enzyme is synthesized during oocyte development and the high levels of the enzyme found during the preimplantation period reflect the requirement of an earlier stage in oocyte development rather than the requirements of cleavage.

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