Abstract

The developmental capacity of in vitro matured rabbit oocytes was assessed after transfer to inseminated, ovariectomized recipients such that fertilization and preimplantation development occurred in vivo. The results demonstrate that of the total number of transferred oocytes (1) 75% were fertilized, (2) 50% underwent cleavage, and (3) 13% developed into expanded blastocysts. By light microscopic criteria, embryos recovered at representative stages of preimplantation development were morphologically indistinguishable from embryos recovered at comparable stages from normally mated animals. Autoradiographs produced by high resolution, two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that changes in the pattern of polypeptide synthesis during the preimplantation stages were directly and entirely comparable for embryos derived either from normally mated animals or from in vivo or in vitro matured and transferred oocytes. Up to approximately the eight-cell stage, the translational patterns indicate the progressive disappearance of numerous oocyte-characteristic polypeptides from the autoradiographs as well as the appearance of some new species of polypeptides. Between the eight-cell and early blastocyst period, extensive and complex changes (qualitative and quantitative) occur in the patterns, whereas, in contrast, the phase of blastocyst growth and expansion that occurs during the latter portion of the preimplantation period is characterized by a fairly uniform and constant translational pattern.

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