RNA synthesis in unfertilized sea urchin eggs
1978
Abstract We have examined the synthesis of messenger-like RNA in unfertilized sea urchin eggs. Most of the RNA synthesized is restricted to the nucleus and sediments from 16 to 30S. A small fraction can be isolated from the postmitochondrial supernatant and displays a sedimentation profile typical of embryonic mRNA with peaks at 9 and 18S. This cytoplasmic RNA is largely present as free RNPs and we estimate that less than 20% of the RNA is in polysomes. The RNA made in the egg is unstable and reaches a steady state with a half-time of about 30 min. We have examined the accumulation of RNA in the egg and have calculated a rate of synthesis of 1.4 × 10 −14 g of RNA/min/egg which is similar, on a per-nucleus basis, to that found in the just-fertilized egg and very early embryo. It is approximately 10 times greater than the rate of RNA synthesis in the blastula nucleus. We estimate that the RNA synthesized by the unfertilized egg amounts to a maximum of 3 × 10 −13 g of potential mRNA at the time of fertilization, or 10–15% of its immediate needs. This RNA cannot account for the increase in protein synthesis that occurs after fertilization, which must be the result of the translation of another population of more stable egg or oogenic mRNA that is kinetically distinct from the RNA we have measured. The steady-state level of labeled RNA present in the egg does not change upon fertilization until after the first cleavage, at about 2.5 hr after fertilization. Thus the RNA synthesis that occurs in the just-fertilized zygote appears to be merely a continuation (at least quantitatively) of the RNA synthesis taking place in the egg.
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