ABSTRACT
The early development of parthenogenetically activated oocytes has been studied in. C57BL × CBA-T6T6 (F1T6) translocation heterozygote mice and C57BL × CBA-LAC (F1LAC) mice. All F1T6 oocytes had either a quadrivalent or a univalent-trivalent configuration at meiosis I; no such chromosome configurations were observed in the F1LAC oocytes. At ovulation 36·5% of the F1T6 oocytes had 19 or 21 chromosomes, whereas 97% of the F1LAC had the normal haploid chromosome number of 20. After parthenogenetic activation, chromosome counts at metaphase of the first cleavage mitosis were made of the eggs with a single pronucleus following extrusion of the second polar body. These activated eggs had similar frequencies of 19, 20 and 21 chromosomes as had the oocytes at ovulation. The activated 1-cell eggs were transferred to the oviducts of pseudopregnant recipients and the embryos recovered 3 days later. At this stage of development, most of the F1T6 embryos with 19 chromosomes were no longer found, but the frequency of 21-chromosome embryos was similar to the frequency of 21-chromosome oocytes and activated eggs. There was a similar mean number of cells in the embryos with 20 and 21 chromosomes.
The results indicate that nearly all the embryos with 19 chromosomes failed to develop, probably beyond the 2-cell stage, whereas oocytes with 21 chromosomes had a similar development to oocytes with 20 chromosomes up to the morula stage.