Shiokawa K, Sameshima M, Tashiro K, Miura T, Nakakura N, Yamana K
Dev Biol. 1986 Aug;116(2):539-42. doi: 10.1016/0012-1606(86)90155-7.
The fate of bacteriophage lambda-DNA was examined after injection into the fertilized eggs of Xenopus laevis. Injection of a large amount of lambda-DNA (ca. 24 ng) into a fertilized Xenopus egg induced the formation around the injected DNA of a giant nucleus-like structure which was surrounded by an apparently normal bilayered nuclear membrane with nuclear pore complexes. Southern blot analysis revealed the persistence of injected lambda-DNA until the blastula stage. The nucleus-like structure was partitioned into blastomeres during cleavage through a process of nuclear fission, and was maintained in a group of extraordinarily large blastomeres until the blastula stage.