Abstract
Qualitative studies on the in vitro uptake and incorporation of tritiated uridine into RNA of the somatic and germinal elements of the starfish ovary were carried out prior to and during hormone-induced oocyte maturation and spawning. Autoradiography of nonhormone-treated ovaries indicated that the outer ovarian wall contained the highest concentration of label, with lesser amounts in the follicle cells and least in the oocytes. Oocytes and follicle cells localized at the periphery of the ovary were labeled first, and both cells became progressively labeled throughout the ovary with time; the label first appeared localized in the nucleolus of the oocyte. Sucrose gradient analysis of the separated cellular components of prelabeled hormone-treated ovaries indicated that RNA synthesis occurred in all segments of the ovary and that the spawned oocyte fraction was the least active. Synthesis of ribosomal RNA was detectable after a lag period of approximately 4 hr. Oocytes incubated in 3H-uridine during and subsequent to 1-methyladenine-induced spawning and maturation synthesized 15–19 S and low molecular weight RNA but not ribosomal RNA. Synthesis of the 15–19 S RNA was inhibited with ethidium bromide and to a limited extent by actinomycin D. Isolated mitochondrial fractions contained most of the labeled 15–19 S RNA. These data suggest the mitochondrial origin of most, if not all, of this intermediate-weight RNA. On the basis of these studies, it appears that starfish oocytes and follicle cells are metabolically active at the transitional period from growth to maturational stages in oocytes. Synthesis of RNA furthermore apparently continues in the cytoplasm subsequent to germinal vesicle breakdown and spawning.
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