Progesterone, the physiological inducer of amphibian meiosis, acts within minutes at plasma membrane receptors of the Rana pipiens oocyte to release 1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG) from plasma and intracellular membranes. High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) analysis of lipid extracts of uninduced oocytes indicates the presence of at least three classes of DAG with a total DAG content of about 150 μmol/kg wet weight. Within 3–5 min after exposure to progesterone, there was a differential increase in all three DAG classes with a twofold increase in total DAG by 10 min. The fatty acid composition of the DAGs in uninduced and progesterone-stimulated oocytes was compared using thin layer chromatographic analysis of lipid extracts from oocytes double-labeled with [ 14C] or [ 3H]glycerol and [ 14C] or [ 3H]fatty acids. The ratio of labeled fatty acid/labeled glycerol was measured in phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylinositol (PI) and DAG. The linoleic (18:2) or arachidonic (20:4) acid/glycerol ratios in basal DAG were low compared to that in PC or PI. In contrast, the myristic (14:0), palmitic (16:0) or oleic (18:1) acid/glycerol ratios in basal DAG were relatively high compared to the ratio in PC and PI. A transient increase in both linoleic and palmitic acid labeling of DAG occurred within the first 1–2 min in progesterone-treated oocytes, followed by a return to or below the basal level. Arachidonic and myristic acid labeling of DAG fall within the first minute after progesterone treatment, followed by a sustained rise over the next 10 min. The [ 3H]oleic acid/[ 14C]glycerol ratio of DAG does not change significantly following exposure to progesterone. Pretreatment with a phospholipid N-methylation inhibitor (2-methylaminoethane) precluded the rise in linoleic and palmitic acid-rich DAG, whereas pretreatment with a diglyceride kinase inhibitor (D102) produced a sustained elevation of linoleic and palmitic acid-rich DAG. These results indicate that the DAG released in response to progesterone is composed of multiple new molecular species of DAG and that both the palmitate and linolate-rich forms are rapidly phosphorylated to form phosphatidic acid (PA). The newly formed DAG species differ from the basal DAG species and reflect sequential activation of sphingomyelin (SM) synthase, PC-specific phospholipase D (PLD) and PI-specific phospholipase C in response to progesterone, which we have described previously.