The concentration of hypoxanthine in mouse follicular fluid has been estimated to be 2–4 m M, and although this concentration maintains meiotic arrest in fully grown mouse oocytes in vitro, oocyte maturation in vivo is not induced by a decrease in the concentration of this purine in follicular fluid (J. J. Eppig, P. F. Ward-Bailey, and D. L. Coleman, Biol. Reprod., 33, 1041–1049, 1985). In the present study, the effect of 2 m M hypoxanthine on oocyte growth and development in vitro was assessed and the ability of gonadotropins to stimulate oocyte maturation in the continued presence of hypoxanthine was determined. Oocyte-granulosa cell complexes were isolated from 10- to 11-day-old mice and cultured in the presence or absence of 2 m M hypoxanthine. Oocytes from 10- to 11-day-old mice are in mid-growth phase and, without further development, are incompetent of undergoing meiotic maturation. During a 12-day culture period the granulosa cell-enclosed oocytes approximately doubled in size and, regardless of the presence or absence of hypoxanthine, 50–70% developed competence to undergo germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD). Hypoxanthine promoted the continued association of oocytes with their companion granulosa cells during the 12-day culture period, and therefore had a beneficial effect on oocyte development. Most of the oocytes that acquired GVBD competence in the absence of hypoxanthine underwent spontaneous GVBD. In contrast, 95% of the GVBD-competent oocytes were maintained in meiotic arrest by hypoxanthine. Following withdrawal of the hypoxanthine after the 12-day culture, 75% of the GVBD-competent oocytes underwent GVBD. These results show that hypoxanthine, and/or its metabolites, maintains meiotic arrest in oocytes that grow and acquire GVBD competence in vitro. Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), but not luteinizing hormone or human chorionic gonadotropin, induced oocyte GVBD in the continued presence of hypoxanthine. FSH stimulated oocyte maturation at a significantly ( P < 0.01) higher frequency than coculture of the granulosa cell-denuded oocytes with granulosa cells in the continued presence of hypoxanthine. FSH did not induce the maturation of denuded oocytes cocultured with granulosa cells. Similar results were obtained using oocyte-cumulus cell complexes isolated from 22-day-old mice wherein ovarian follicular development was promoted by injection of exogenous gonadotropin. Based on these results, is it hypothesized that GVBD was promoted in these culture systems by an FSH-induced positive signal from granulosa/cumulus cells, and not simply by deprivation from the meiosis-arresting action of hypoxanthine.