Abstract

Hydrozoan eggs are normally fertilized at the site of polar body formation. The female pronucleus is just under the cell membrane at this site. Sperm are attracted to the eggs and aggregate at this site. This paper demonstrates that this site is the only region on the egg surface where the sperm can fuse with the egg. This has been done by cutting unfertilized eggs into fragments containing the site of polar body formation and fragments without this region. Sperm were added to the fragments and their ability to be fertilized was assayed by noting whether or not they cleaved. Only fragments containing the site of polar body formation cleaved. The absence of cleavage in fragments lacking the site of polar body formation cannot be attributed to the inability of these fragments to attract sperm. Such fragments attract sperm for several hours while fragments which contain the site of polar body formation stop attracting sperm a few minutes after fertilization. Cytological studies of egg fragments which do not contain the site of polar body formation show that they do not contain sperm nuclei. The lack of cleavage in these fragments cannot be attributed to the lack of a female pronucleus. By using centrifugation it is possible to move the female pronucleus away from the site of polar body formation. By cutting these centrifuged eggs in an appropriate way it is possible to create egg fragments with the site of polar body formation that lack the female pronucleus and egg fragments that lack the site of polar body formation but contain a female pronucleus. Only fragments which contain the site of polar body formation can be fertilized.

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