Abstract

In this study, the chromosome constitution of both unfertilized oocytes and fertilized eggs isolated from the oviducts of LT/Sv strain mice were analyzed. Air-dried chromosome preparations from unfertilized oocytes revealed that about one-third of those examined were ovulated as primary oocytes. These were arrested at metaphase of the first meiotic division and exhibited the characteristic "tetrad" chromosome configuration. The remaining two-thirds of the unfertilized oocytes were ovulated at metaphase of the second meiotic division. The fertilized eggs were isolated from the oviducts of LT/Sv females previously mated to (C57BL x CBA) F1 hybrid males. Analysis of the fertilized eggs at metaphase of their first cleavage mitosis revealed that about one-third of the eggs examined were digynic triploids, whereas the remaining two-thirds had the normal diploid chromosome constitution. In the triploids, the 40 female chromosomes present (mouse, n = 20) were derived from a single diploid pronucleus formed after the extrusion of a first polar body, and following the monospermic fertilization of primary oocytes. The female pronuclear-derived chromosomes invariably exhibited "homologous pairing," and these were associated at their centromeres. The ovulation, penetration, and subsequent fertilization of primary oocytes is an extremely unusual phenomenon in mammals and only appears to occur on a regular basis in LT/Sv mice. The premature "cytoplasmic maturation" of these oocytes is of interest, as they clearly have the same developmental capacity as secondary oocytes. The significance of these observations in relation to folliculogenesis and litter size in LT/Sv mice is discussed.

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