The applicability of Pavlok's method characterising the nuclear status of
early preimplantation bovine embryos by nuclear labelling pattern after a
short pulse of [5-3H]uridine (revealing in situ detection of RNA
transcription at the onset of the major embryonic transcription) was
tested on experimentally irradiated 8- to 16-cell bovine embryos. After
[5-3H]uridine labelling the semi-thin sections of these embryos were
analysed by autoradiography for intranuclear distribution of newly
synthesised RNA expected to be influenced by increasing doses of
irradiation by gamma rays from a 60Co source. In control embryos,
the labelling was homogeneously distributed in nucleoplasm and in
nucleoli. The expected effects were clearly detected already in
embryos irradiated with a dose of 2 Gy, in which low-level RNA
synthesis was localised mostly at the periphery of the nucleus,
the nuclear centre being without labelling. A detailed analysis of
consecutive sections of embryos from all groups of irradiated and
control embryos, using an arbitrary scale considering these effects,
confirmed the detectability of the threshold level of genome impairment.