The earliest stages of development in most animals are under the control of maternally inherited information. The initiation of embryonic gene expression has been reported at the mid-blastula in amphibians and the mid-2-cell stage to the early morula in mammals. In chick embryos, embryonic gene expression was detectable at stage X (morula) and showed marked activation at stage XIII (blastula) with a gradual increase thereafter. Synthesis of rRNA and tRNA was low at stage X and was already the major class of RNA at stage XIII in chick embryos. The observed upregulation of RNA synthesis seems to coincide with a period of extensive fine structural differentiation when the first major cellular migrations start and signal the formation of the primitive streak in the chick embryo.