¶ … ionizing radiation on meiotic spindles, 34 oocytes were divided up and then exposed to 0, 74, or 222 Gy of ionizing radiation. Of the six control oocytes that were sham exposed to radiation, one degenerated (Figure, 83.3%). A total of 14 oocytes were exposed to 74 Gy of radiation and only one lacked spindles (Figure, 92.9%). Exposing 14 oocytes to 222 Gy of radiation destroyed spindles in nine oocytes (Figure, 28.6%). These results suggest radiation doses above 74 Gy are capable of degrading meiotic spindles in oocytes.
Sufficient irradiation eliminates oocyte spindles. Oocytes were either sham exposed to radiation, or exposed to 74 or 222 Gy of radiation. Percent of oocytes with intact spindles after irradiation were visualized by confocal microscopy and fluorescent staining for tubulin.
Discussion
Our results indicate that exposure of oocytes to sufficient doses of ionizing radiation can destroy meiotic spindles. The fate of these spindles can't be determined from these experiments, but prior research studies examining irradiation-induced mitotic arrest of cells indicated that spindles depolymerized (Zaremba and Irwin, 1981). The data presented here is consistent with meiotic spindle depolymerization occurring at the highest dose of ionizing radiation used.
Mechanism of Spindle Depolymerization
Spindle formation can occur in the absence of protein synthesis (Inoue et al., 1975; Inoue & Ritter, 1978) and ionizing radiation doesn't alter the rate of tubulin synthesis in cells (Noland et al., 1974). This suggests that mitotic spindles form from existing stores of subunits (Zaremba...
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