Abstract
When sea urchin eggs are pretreated with fluorescent chelate probe chlorotetracycline (CTC) and then fertilized with unlabeled sperm, a small, brightly fluorescent particle resembling the mitochondrion of free-swimming sperm both in size and fluorescent staining characteristics appears in the egg cytoplasm. This particle first appears near the base of the insemination cone and, like the paternal mitochondrion identified in previous ultrastructural studies, remains closely associated with the male pronucleus during its microtubule-dependent migration toward the egg center. These similarities strongly suggest that the fluorescent particle observed in the cytoplasm of living, CTC-pretreated sea urchin eggs is, in fact, the mitochondrion of the fertilizing sperm.
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