Abstract

Unfertilized eggs of animals contain maternal messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and proteins, which are required for the maintenance of metabolism and regulation of development during the initial stages of embryogenesis. Unfertilized eggs are transcriptionally and translationally quiescent. After fertilization, activated translation of maternal mRNAs is one of the major forces that direct the early stages of embryogenesis before activation of the zygotic genome. However, a low rate and level of protein synthesis have been detected in unfertilized sea urchin eggs indicating that translation is not completely inhibited. Analysis of translatomes of unfertilized eggs and early embryos detected three sets of maternal mRNAs translated either before or after fertilization, or both before and after fertilization. Proteins encoded by maternal mRNAs, which are translated in unfertilized eggs, perform many different functions required for homeostasis, fertilization, egg activation, and early development. This suggests that translation in unfertilized sea urchin eggs may be required to renew the pool of proteins involved in these processes. Thus, translation may be necessary to maintain the fertility and developmental potential of sea urchin eggs during the long-term storage of eggs in ovaries until spawning begins.

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