Abstract
Zona-free F1 (C57B1/10 .times. CBA/H) mouse eggs were fertilized in vitro with F1 spermatozoa and examined in whole mounts 4.5-5 h or 17-19 h after mixing the gametes. The fertilization rate was nearly 90% with .apprx. 1/3 of eggs undergoing monospermic and 2/3 polyspermic fertilization (2-8 spermatozoa). In all monospermic eggs the sperm head developed into a large pronucleus. In polyspermic eggs either all or only some of the spermatozoa had completed the process of transformation, while the remainder were arrested at the early phase of pronuclear development. During the 1st cleavage division these pronuclei condensed but separate chromosomes did not differentiate and therefore could not contribute to the genome of the embryo. The condensed pronuclei were passively displaced to 1 or both blastomeres. The number of decondensed sperm heads present in the egg shortly after fertilization was therefore not always equivalent to the ploidy of the future embryo. The duration of the 1st cell cycle appeared to be related to ploidy (number of functional = advanced pronuclei), with the monospermic eggs dividing first.