Abstract

In order to study the mechanisms of nondisjunction at meiosis I in oocytes gonadotropin-stimulated Djungarian hamsters were treated at two stages [4.5 and 6 h post human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG)] during the preovulatory period with 1000 mg/kg Carbendazim (MBC). The compound, known to bind fast but reversibly to mammalian tubulin, was chosen to investigate whether the stage at which spindle function is inhibited affects the pattern of nondisjunction. Ovulated oocytes were cytologically prepared and scored for hyperhaploidy, diploidy and presegregation. Application at an early spindle phase, 4.5 h post HCG, to females stimulated with a low gonadotropin dose [3 IU pregnant mares serum (PMS); 2 IU HCG] caused a high frequency of nondisjunction (40.6%) with a more or less nonspecific pattern of malsegregated bivalents. Treatment at a late stage of spindle function (6 h post HCG) resulted in a less frequent (22.5%) but highly preferential malsegregation of those A-D group bivalents thought earlier to be late segregators. On the other hand, oocytes from females primed with a high (10 IU PMS and HCG) gonadotropin dose, a treatment assumed to delay meiosis by approximately 1.5 h, responded to MBC treatment at the late stage (6 h) with a nonspecific pattern and a high frequency (71.2%) of nondisjunction. The latter result is comparable to that in which MBC was given at the early stage (4.5 h) and after a low gonadotropin dose. The high nondisjunction response additionally indicates that spindles in hypergonadotropic stimulated oocytes are more susceptible and/or that the concentration of the inhibitor is higher in such oocytes. Only few oocytes with presegregation (3.1%; 0.0%; 1.7%) and few diploid oocytes (3.3%; 1.5%; 3.2%) with complete inhibition of meiosis I were observed. We conclude, that in Djungarian hamsters (1) the segregation of bivalents at meiosis I is asynchronous with the large A-D bivalents segregating last, (2) the phase in which spindle function is inhibited determines the pattern of nondisjunction, and (3) the resumption of meiosis I - from dictyotene to metaphase II - does not follow a rigidly timed programme but depends on the conditions of follicular maturation.

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