Abstract: | The competence of Xenopus laevis oocytes in various stages of growth to respond to progesterone treatment was investigated. Full-grown (stage 6) oocytes undergo nuclear membrane dissolution and resume meiosis in response to progesterone exposure, while smaller oocytes (stages 3-5; less than 1100 micron in diameter) do not. The defect which prevents 750- to 1050-micron oocytes from responding to progesterone can be overcome by microinjecting cytoplasm withdrawn from a stage 6 oocyte. Germinal vesicle breakdown in these small oocytes occurs on a timetable similar to that of stage 6 oocytes exposed to progesterone and is accompanied by a twofold increase in protein synthesis as well as the activation of MPF. The results argue that a cytoplasmic factor(s) which probably first appears at late stage 5 is required for progesterone responsiveness. The identity and role of the factor(s) in the development of maturation competence and the regulation of maternal mRNA translation are discussed. |