Abstract

Previous studies have shown that exogenous mRNAs injected into full-grown (stage 6) Xenopus oocytes are translated only at the expense of endogenous messages; translational capacity is limited. In this report, we demonstrate that injection of globin mRNA into small, stage 4 oocytes results in an increase in total protein synthesis without a concomitant decrease in the translation of endogenous mRNAs. The absence of competition with endogenous messages in stage 4 oocytes, injected with globin mRNA, compared with stage 6 oocytes, was not due to differential turnover of the injected mRNA. Hybridization of RNA from mRNA-injected oocytes at both stages revealed that similar amounts of globin mRNA were present. These results are interpreted to mean that protein synthesis in growing oocytes is limited by the availability of mRNA and not components of the translational machinery. This conclusion, however, does not apply to all mRNA classes. The capacity of stage 4 oocytes to translate a mRNA (zein) on membrane-bound polysomes is as restricted as reported previously for stage 6 oocytes. This result suggests that putative membrane binding sites or rough endoplasmic reticulum content are limited in oocytes at both stages. The possible role of association of injected mRNA with endogenous proteins that prevent translation is discussed.

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