Roscovitine, a potent inhibitor of M-phase promoting factor kinase activity, was used to maintain calf oocytes at the germinal vesicle stage for a 24 h culture period. Cumulus-oocyte complexes were first prematured for 24 h in the presence of different levels of roscovitine (12.5, 25, 50 and 100 mu M). Roscovitine was shown to block germinal vesicle breakdown in calf oocytes in a concentration dependent manner. Significantly greater inhibitory effect was observed at 50 and 100 mu M with 64.6% and 63.2% oocytes being blocked in the germinal vesicle stage when compared to the control (0.0%) and the 12.5 mu M (2.9%) and 25 mu M (18.8%) groups. However, this inhibitory effect of roscovitine was fully reversible since a substantial number of the oocytes resumed meiosis and reached the metaphase 11 stage after a further 24 h of culture in a permissive medium. Cleavage rates and blastocyst yields were not significantly different for oocytes cultured under 50 mu M roscovitine inhibition compared to oocytes not subjected to prematuration culture (rates of 76.7% cleavage and 8.7% blastocysts for control oocytes compared to 69.8% and 6.3%, respectively, for oocytes pretreated with 50 V,M roscovitine). The morphology of the meiotic spindle was typical of metaphase 11 in 75.8% and 82.1% of the oocytes reaching the metaphase 11 stage after pretreatment with 50 mu M roscovitine compared to control, respectively. A normal distribution of actin filaments was observed in 97.0% and 98.2% of oocytes exposed to 50 mu M roscovitine compared to control, respectively.