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1 March 2002 Activation of the Ribosomal RNA Genes Late in the Third Cell Cycle of Porcine Embryos
Dorthe Viuff, Torben Greve, Peter Holm, Henrik Callesen, Poul Hyttel, Preben D. Thomsen
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Abstract

In porcine embryos, nucleoli are first observed during the third postfertilization cell cycle, i.e., at the 4-cell stage. However, direct studies of the initiation of rRNA transcription have not been reported. This transcription was investigated in the present study by simultaneous visualization of the rRNA genes and the rRNA by fluorescent in situ hybridization using a porcine 28S rDNA probe and subsequent visualization of argyrophilic nucleolar proteins by silver staining of extracted and fixed nuclei from in vivo-derived porcine embryos (n = 229). Nucleologenesis was observed by transmission electron microscopy. In general, the 2-cell and 4-cell embryos fixed at 10 and 20 h postcleavage (hpc) showed no signs of rRNA transcription. Four small clusters of fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) labeling were visible in interphase nuclei, consistent with hybridization to the rRNA gene clusters only; there was no silver staining at the sites of the rRNA genes and nucleolus precursor bodies. From 30 hpc onwards, most 4-cell embryos had medium size to large clusters of FITC-labeled areas colocalized with silver staining of rRNA gene clusters and fibrillogranular nucleoli. These observations indicate that rRNA transcription had been initiated. These signs of rRNA synthesis could be blocked by actinomycin D, which is a strong inhibitor of RNA polymerase I. The rRNA transcription of porcine embryos is initiated between 20 and 30 hpc, corresponding to the end of the S-phase or the beginning of the G2 phase during the third cell cycle.

Dorthe Viuff, Torben Greve, Peter Holm, Henrik Callesen, Poul Hyttel, and Preben D. Thomsen "Activation of the Ribosomal RNA Genes Late in the Third Cell Cycle of Porcine Embryos," Biology of Reproduction 66(3), 629-634, (1 March 2002). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod66.3.629
Received: 12 July 2001; Accepted: 1 October 2001; Published: 1 March 2002
KEYWORDS
developmental biology
early development
embryo
fertilization
gene regulation
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