Abstract: | The effect of urethan on artificial induction of cleavage in eggs of the sea urchin, Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus, was studied. When the eggs were exposed for 20 minutes to seawater containing urethan (final concentration, 0.08 M) after butyric acid-activation and then treated with hypertonic seawater, the cleavage rate was enchanced by about 1.5 times as compared with the nontreated eggs. In the eggs exposed to urethan–seawater for over 70 minutes many clear spots appeared throughout the cytoplasm. Simultaneously, the pigment granules, which had been embedded within the cortex, migrated to the inner cytoplasm and encircled a monastral centrosphere and clear spots. The clear spots were composed of microtubules much like cytasters, and in the central region of them centrioles were not yet found. The eggs in which the pigment granules disappeared from the cortex may be more susceptible to cleavage induction by succeeding hypertonic treatment. |