Abstract
To detect structural changes following UV irradiation in the “germinal plasm,” ultrastructure of the “germinal plasm” was studied in normal and UV-irradiated eggs of Xenopus laevis at the following stages: prior to fertilization, early 2-cell, 32-cell, and late blastula. It was revealed that ultrastructural features of the “germinal plasm” were essentially common between Xenopus laevis and Rana pipiens. That is, the “germinal plasm” is composed primarily of a large aggregation of mitochondria and distinctive electron dense bodies (germinal granules). Irregularly shaped cylinderlike granules (giant germinal granules), having the same internal characteristics as the germinal granules, were found in the “germinal plasm” of all eggs examined. Comparison between normal and UV-irradiated eggs has demonstrated that UV irradiation causes swelling and vacuolation of mitochondria and fragmentation of germinal granules. The suggestion is that the integrity of certain UV-sensitive factor(s), which is involved in maintaining normal structure of germinal granules, is indispensable for the determination of the primordial germ cells.
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