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1.
Hyalin is a large (ca. 350 x 10(3) kD by gel electrophoresis) molecule that contributes to the hyalin layer surrounding the sea urchin embryo. In previous work a mAb (McA Tg-HYL), specific for hyalin, was found to inhibit cell-hyalin adhesion and block morphogenesis of whole embryos (Adelson, D. L., and T. D. Humphreys. 1988. Development. 104:391-402). In this report, hyalin ultrastructure was examined via rotary shadowing. Hyalin appeared to be a filamentous molecule approximately 75-nm long with a globular "head" about 12 nm in diameter that tended to form aggregates by associating head to head. Hyalin molecules tended to associate with a distinct high molecular weight globular particle ("core"). In fractions containing the core particle often more than one hyalin molecule were seen to be associated with the core. The core particle maintained a tenacious association with hyalin throughout purification procedures. The site(s) of McA Tg-HYL binding to the hyalin molecule were visualized by decorating purified hyalin with the antibody and then rotary shadowing the complex. In these experiments, McA Tg-HYL attached to the hyalin filament near the head region in a pattern suggesting that more than one antibody binding site exists on the hyalin filament. From the ultrastructural data and from the cell adhesion data presented earlier we conclude that hyalin is a filamentous molecule that binds to other hyalin molecules and contains multiple cell binding sites. Attempts were made to demonstrate the existence of lower molecular weight hyalin precursors. Whilst no such precursors could be identified by immunoprecipitation of in vivo labeled embryo lysates, immunoprecipitation of in vitro translation products suggested such precursors (ca 40 x 10(3) kD) might exist.  相似文献   

2.
The 330 kDa fibrillar glycoprotein hyalin is a well known component of the sea urchin embryo extracellular hyaline layer. Only recently, the main component of hyalin, the hyalin repeat domain, has been identified in organisms as widely divergent as bacteria and humans using the GenBank database and therefore its possible function has garnered a great deal of interest. In the sea urchin, hyalin serves as an adhesive substrate in the developing embryo and we have recently shown that exogenously added purified hyalin from Strongylocentrotus purpuratus embryos blocks a model cellular interaction in these embryos, archenteron elongation/attachment to the blastocoel roof. It is important to demonstrate the generality of this result by observing if hyalin from one species of sea urchin blocks archenteron elongation/attachment in another species. Here we show in three repeated experiments, with 30 replicate samples for each condition, that the same concentration of S. purpuratus hyalin (57 microg/ml) that blocked the interaction in living S. purpuratus embryos blocked the same interaction in living Lytechinus pictus embryos. These results correspond with the known crossreactivity of antibody against S. purpuratus hyalin with L. pictus hyalin. We propose that hyalin-hyalin receptor binding may mediate this adhesive interaction. The use of a microplate assay that allows precise quantification of developmental effects should help facilitate identification of the function of hyalin in organisms as divergent as bacteria and humans.  相似文献   

3.
Hyalin is a large glycoprotein, consisting of the hyalin repeat domain and non-repeated regions, and is the major component of the hyaline layer in the early sea urchin embryo of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. The hyalin repeat domain has been identified in proteins from organisms as diverse as bacteria, sea urchins, worms, flies, mice and humans. While the specific function of hyalin and the hyalin repeat domain is incompletely understood, many studies suggest that it has a functional role in adhesive interactions. In part I of this series, we showed that hyalin isolated from the sea urchin S. purpuratus blocked archenteron elongation and attachment to the blastocoel roof occurring during gastrulation in S. purpuratus embryos, (Razinia et al., 2007). The cellular interactions that occur in the sea urchin, recognized by the U.S. National Institutes of Health as a model system, may provide insights into adhesive interactions that occur in human health and disease. In part II of this series, we showed that S. purpuratus hyalin heterospecifically blocked archenteron-ectoderm interaction in Lytechinus pictus embryos (Alvarez et al., 2007). In the current study, we have isolated hyalin from the sea urchin L. pictus and demonstrated that L. pictus hyalin homospecifically blocks archenteron-ectoderm interaction, suggesting a general role for this glycoprotein in mediating a specific set of adhesive interactions. We also found one major difference in hyalin activity in the two sea urchin species involving hyalin influence on gastrulation invagination.  相似文献   

4.
The hyaline layer (HL) surrounding the sea urchin blastula appears to dissolve in 1 M glycine. However, after this treatment, there persists over the surfaces of the blastomeres a layer of material, referred to here as the apical lamina (AL), that sloughs off as an adhesive convoluted bag upon gradual dissociation of the embryo. Isolated hyaline layers, referred to as HL-AL complexes, were analyzed by urea-SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A major protein of the HL-AL complex, hyalin, bands or precipitates in the stacking gel. Two other major proteins, both strongly PAS positive, migrate with apparent molecular weights of 175K and 145K daltons. As with intact embryos, the glycine wash removes the hyalin protein from the isolated HL-AL complex, leaving the undissolved AL which consists primarily of the 175K- and 145K-dalton proteins. The embryo's own perivitelline-localized cortical granule peroxidase heavily radioiodinates the proteins of the HL-AL complex, further verifying their apical, extracellular location. Unlike hyalin, the AL proteins do not precipitate with calcium ions. Compared to the entire HL-AL complex, the AL contains a greater percentage of carbohydrate. No sialic acid is associated with the HL-AL complex, but the AL contains some sulfate. In contrast to a published report based on ultrastructural staining, no biochemical evidence was found in this study for the presence of collagen or significant glycosaminoglycan within the HL-AL complex. No developmental differences were observed in AL proteins from 1-hr-old embryos compared to those from blastulae. However, there is evidence suggesting heterogeneity and developmental differences in hyalin. The possible organization of hyalin and the AL proteins into separate layers surrounding the embryo is discussed. The influence of the AL proteins in morphogenesis and cell adhesion is considered, and hypothetical roles attributed to the HL and hyalin are critically questioned.  相似文献   

5.
It is often difficult to determine the effects of various substances on the development of the sea urchin embryo due to the lack of appropriate quantitative microassays. Here, a microplate assay has been developed for quantitatively evaluating the effects of substances, such as hyalin, on living sea urchin embryos. Hyalin (330 kDa) is a major constituent of the sea urchin hyaline layer, an extracellular matrix that develops 20 min postinsemination. Function of the hyaline layer and its major constituent, is the adhesion of cells during morphogenesis. Using wide-mouthed pipette tips, 25 microl of 24-h Strongylocentrotus purpuratus embryos were transferred to each well of a 96-well polystyrene flat-bottom microplate yielding about 12 embryos per well. Specific concentrations of purified hyalin diluted in low calcium seawater were added to the wells containing the embryos, which were then incubated for 24 h at 15 degree C. The hyalin-treated and control samples were observed live and after fixation with 10% formaldehyde using a Zeiss Axiolab photomicroscope. The small number of embryos in each well allowed quantification of the developmental effects of the added media. Specific archenteron morphologies-attached, unattached, no invagination and exogastrula-were scored and a dose-dependent response curve was generated. Hyalin at high concentrations blocked invagination. At low concentrations, it inhibited archenteron elongation/attachment to the blastocoel roof. While many studies have implicated hyalin in a variety of interactions during morphogenesis, we are not aware of any past studies that have quantitatively examined the effects of exogenous hyalin on specific gastrulation events in whole embryos.  相似文献   

6.
All stages of sea urchin embryos through pluteus can be dissociated to their component cells through the use of a 1 M solution of glycine containing EDTA, and a similar glycine solution can be used to prevent the formation of the fertilization membrane and remove the hyaline layer material released at fertilization. The protein hyalin, which makes up the bulk of the hyaline layer, can be recovered from these glycine solutions by calcium addition and quantitative agreement was found between the hyalin released at fertilization and the hyalin present at all later developmental stages. However, embryos stripped of their hyalin at fertilization often develop normally, which is unexpected in view of the apparent involvement of the hyaline layer in developmental mechanics. Such embryos are found to have regenerated an appreciable fraction of the hyalin removed at fertilization and this regeneration occurs at the time of blastulation. Thus the regeneration appears to be stimulated by hyaline layer removal at fertilization, but it does not take place until several hours later, at the time this layer has been postulated to play a role in development.  相似文献   

7.
Properties of ovacquenin, a reaggregation-promoting substance from sea urchin embryos, were further studied and compared with those of hyalin, a calcium-insoluble protein of the hyaline layer surrounding the sea urchin embryo. Properties of hyalin were basically in agreement with previous reports, but differed in some aspects. Hyalin and ovacquenin were very similar in various aspects and were hard to distiguish generally, but they were separated by ammonium sulfate fractionation. Hyalin was precipitated at a low salt concentration, while ovacquenin remained soluble until the salt concentration exceeded half saturation. Therefore it was concluded that hyalin and ovacquenin are very much alike but distinct from each other. Probable relation of ovacquenin to hyalin was discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The sea urchin embryo hyaline layer is an extracellular investment which develops within 20 min postinsemination of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs and contains a single calcium-precipitable subunit termed hyalin. Other ultrastructural and biochemical studies have suggested that hyalin is localized in the cortical granules. We have examined the hypothesis that hyalin is a cell surface protein of the unfertilized egg using vectorial lactoperoxidase-catalyzed radioiodination. Extracts of labeled unfertilized eggs contained several labeled proteins, one of which was electrophoretically indistinguishable from authentic hyalin isolated by each of three different procedures. Pronase digestion of labeled unfertilized eggs removed 75% of the label, but the labeled hyalin-like molecule was still present in whole cell extracts. Upon insemination, pronase-digested, labeled eggs formed an apparently normal hyaline layer and whole cell extracts contained the labeled hyalin-like molecule. Denuded, labeled eggs were inseminated and the hyaline layer was selectively solubilized in calcium- and magnesium-free artificial seawater. Labeled hyalin was purified from this crude hyalin preparation to constant specific radioactivity and apparent homogeneity as shown by gel electrophoresis. These data strongly suggest that hyalin or a precursor is a cell surface protein of the unfertilized sea urchin egg.  相似文献   

9.
The protein composition and organization of the sea urchin extraembryonic hyaline layer was examined. Hyalin and a polypeptide of 45 kilodaltons (kDa) were present in hyaline layers isolated from 1-h-old embryos through to the pluteus larva stage. In contrast, several polypeptide species ranging in size from 175 to 32 kDa either decreased in amount or disappeared from the layer as embryonic development proceeded. Concomitant with the changes in composition, hyaline layers became progressively more refractory to dissolution by washing in Ca2+, Mg2(+)-free seawater. Incubation of intact layers, isolated from 1-h-old embryos, with proteinase K resulted in the selective digestion of hyalin and was accompanied by release of the 45-kDa polypeptide from the layers. Washing intact layers in 20 mM Tris (pH 8.0) also resulted in the selective removal of hyalin and the 45-kDa polypeptide. The Ca2(+)-precipitable protein hyalin, alone among the hyaline layer polypeptides, bound the Ca2(+)-antagonist ruthenium red. These results suggest a structural organization within the hyaline layer that is both heterogenous and dynamic throughout embryonic development.  相似文献   

10.
Mammalian cortical granules contain two polypeptides (p62 and p56) that are incorporated into the cortical granule envelope after fertilization and function in cleavage of the zygote and the preimplantation blastomeres. Since the echinoderm hyaline layer and mammalian cortical granule envelope are analogous, and since the hyaline layer protein, hyalin, functions in early echinoderm embryogenesis, this study was done to determine whether p62 and p56 and/or other components of the mammalian cortical granule envelope are related to hyalin. A polyclonal antibody (IL2) against purified S. purpuratus hyalin was shown by confocal scanning laser microscopy to bind to hamster cortical granules and to the cortical granule envelope of fertilized hamster oocytes and preimplantation embryos up to the blastocyst stage. In immunoblots, IL2 bound only to 62- and 56-kDa cortical granule proteins that were incorporated into the cortical granule envelope after fertilization. IL2 binding antigens appeared to be resynthesized by preimplantation embryos starting at the 2-cell stage of development. In vivo treatment of 2-cell-stage hamster embryos with IL2 inhibited blastomere cleavage, but treatment of morulae did not inhibit blastocyst implantation. These results support the idea that the mammalian cortical granule envelope proteins, p62/p56, share a common antigenic epitope(s) with echinoderm hyalin, and that p62/p56, like hyalin, play a role in early embryogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
The hyaline layer (HL) is an extracellular matrix surrounding sea urchin embryos which has been implicated in a cell adhesion and morphogenesis. The apical lamina (AL) is a fibrous meshwork that remains after removal of hyalin from the HL and the fibropellins (FP) are glycoproteins thought to be the principal components of the AL. Using anti-FP antibodies (AL-1 and AL-2) we report immunoprecipitations and affinity purifications yield a high molecular weight complex comprised of the FP glycoproteins. The three components form a complex, stabilized by disulphide cross-linking and have stochiometric ratios of 2 FPIa molecules to 1 each of FPIb and FPIII. Pulse chase experiments indicate all 3 FP's are synthesized throughout development with peaks in synthesis during cleavage and a sustained peak beginning at hatching. Using immunogold and immunoperoxidase localization, the FP localize to a fibrillar complex forming the innermost layer of the HL. In cell adhesion experiments, cells adhere to affinity purified FP in a temperature, time and concentration dependent manner. Cell adhesion to Fp is about 70% of that seen when hyalin is used as a substrate. Pretreating with AG1 and AG2 reduces in vitro cell adhesion by about 65%. We conclude FP's form a fibrillar complex, which is synthesized throughout early development and functions, with other components of the HL, as a substrate for cell adhesion.  相似文献   

12.
The fertilized sea urchin egg is invested by the hyaline layer, a thick extracellular coat which is necessary for normal development. On the basis of ultrastructural studies and the fact that hyalin is released during the time of the cortical reaction, it has been generally accepted that hyalin is derived from the cortical granules. However, this has never been proven definitely, and recently, it has been reported that hyalin is a membrane and/or cell surface protein. To determine where hyalin is stored, we carried out an ultrastructural immunocytochemical localization of hyalin in the unfertilized egg. Hyalin purified from isolated hyaline layers was used to immunize rabbits. Antisera so obtained were shown to be hyalin specific following absorption with a combination of sea urchin proteins. Immunocytochemical localizations were carried out on sections of Epon-embedded material using protein A-coated gold particles as an antibody marker. Our results demonstrate that, prior to fertilization, hyalin is stored in the homogeneous component of the cortical granule in Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis and Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Labeling of small cortical vesicles in both unfertilized and fertilized eggs, suggests that these vesicles may contain a secondary reservoir of hyalin.  相似文献   

13.
An antigen is described which is a marker for the oral ectoderm and foregut of the sea urchin embryo. In Lytechinus variegatus, the antigen is first detectable by immunofluorescence on the surface of fertilized eggs, and remains globally distributed through the early stages of gastrulation. Thereafter the antigen is localized to the oral ectoderm and foregut, coincident with the morphogenesis of these regions. The antigen is a large, detergent-insoluble, filamentous glycoprotein associated with the tips of the microvilli in the hyaline layer. This glycoprotein is present in two forms, a approximately 350-kDa form that is maternally synthesized and a much larger form which is synthesized at late gastrula stage as a 350-kDa precursor before becoming modified and assembled into the hyaline layer. The timing of synthesis of the zygotic form of the molecule correlates precisely with the localized expression of the antigen. The antigen copurifies with intact hyaline layers and cosediments with hyalin in the presence of calcium, suggesting that it is a structural component of the hyaline layer.  相似文献   

14.
A third major, calcium-insoluble component of the sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) hyaline layer has been purified and physically characterized. In the absence of divalent cations, the native, soluble protein has a sedimentation coefficient of 9.6 S and a molecular weight of 4.5 +/- 0.1 x 10(5). These data indicate that this large protein assumes an elongated, nonspherical conformation in solution. Its sedimentation behavior and its mobility on nondenaturing electrophoretic gels distinguish the 9.6 S protein from the 11.6 S and 6.4 S hyalin proteins we have previously characterized. That the 6.4 S, 9.6 S, and 11.6 S proteins are the major calcium-insoluble structural components of the hyaline layer is supported by the fact that we have found them in a variety of hyalin protein fractions prepared by a number of standard approaches. All three proteins are precipitated by calcium ions, thus fitting the operational definition of hyalin. Evidence is presented that the 11.6 S protein may overlie the 9.6 S protein in the hyaline layer.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Employing electron-microscopic methods that help retain polyanionic materials, we describe the extracellular coverings of a sea urchin (Lytechinus variegatus) throughout ontogeny. The surface of the embryo is covered by a two-layered cuticle (commonly called the hyaline layer), which in turn is covered by a granular layer. The granular layer is retained after addition of alcian blue to the fixative solutions, and has not been previously described for any sea urchin. After hatching, the granular layer disappears, but the hyaline layer continues to cover most of the larval surface until settlement and metamorphosis. A few days before metamorphosis, the hyaline layer lining the vestibular invagination of the competent pluteus larva is replaced by a three-layered cuticle resembling that of the adult sea urchin. The hyaline layer covering the rest of the larva is evidently lost at metamorphosis during the involution of the general epidermis.  相似文献   

16.
Echinonectin is a dimeric, glycoprotein found in the hyaline layer of the developing sea urchin embryo. It was found that echinonectin supports adhesion of embryonic cells in vitro. Previous studies have shown that the protein hyalin also supports adhesion. The purpose of this study was to examine the specificity of cell-echinonectin interactions during sea urchin development. Primary mesenchyme cells (PMCs) ingress into the blastocoel during gastrulation. In the process the PMCs lose contact with the hyaline layer. It was found experimentally that differentiating PMCs decreased their adhesion to hyalin at the time of ingression. It was of interest, therefore, to determine whether there was a coordinate loss of adhesion to echinonectin at ingression as well. When cell-echinonectin interactions were quantified using a centrifugal force-based adhesion assay, it was shown that micromeres adhered well to echinonectin. At the time of ingression, PMCs displayed reduced adhesion to echinonectin just as had been found when hyalin was tested as a substrate. There was no change in adhesion of presumptive ectoderm or endoderm to echinonectin over the same time period. Early in gastrulation presumptive ectoderm and endoderm adhered to echinonectin only half as strongly as to equimolar concentrations of hyalin. After gastrulation endoderm cells were observed to retain the same relative affinity to hyalin and echinonectin, while ectoderm cells became equally adhesive for both hyalin and echinonectin. Quantitatively, this represents an overall increase in the affinity of ectodermal cells for echinonectin. Adhesion to combined substrata of echinonectin and hyalin was reduced but not abolished by monoclonal antibodies specific for echinonectin. The antibodies did not cross-react with hyalin. We conclude that both echinonectin and hyalin independently act as adhesive substrata for the developing sea urchin embryo. PMCs lose an affinity for echinonectin and ectodermal cells later increase their affinity for this substrate.  相似文献   

17.
To investigate the role of axonemal components in the mechanics and regulation of flagellar movement, we have generated a series of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) against sea urchin (Lytechinus pictus) sperm axonemal proteins, selected for their ability to inhibit the motility of demembranated sperm models. One of these antibodies, mAb D1, recognizes an antigen of 142 kDa on blots of sea urchin axonemal proteins and of purified outer arm dynein, suggesting that it acts by binding to the heaviest intermediate chain (IC1) of the dynein arm. mAb D1 blocks the motility of demembranated sea urchin spermatozoa by modifying the beating amplitude and shear angle without affecting the ATPase activity of purified dynein or of demembranated immotile spermatozoa. Furthermore, mAb D1 had only a marginal effect on the velocity of sliding microtubules in trypsin-treated axonemes. This antibody was also capable of inhibiting the motility of flagella of Oxyrrhis marina, a primitive dinoflagellate, and those of demembranated human spermatozoa. Localization of the antigen recognized by mAb D1 by immunofluorescence reveals its presence on the axonemes of flagella from sea urchin spermatozoa and O. marina but not on the cortical microtubule network of the dinoflagellate. These results are consistent with a dynamic role for the dynein intermediate chain IC1 in the bending and/or wave propagation of flagellar axonemes.  相似文献   

18.
At gastrulation the primary mesenchyme cells of sea urchin embryos lose contact with the extracellular hyaline layer and with neighboring blastomeres as they pass through the basal lamina and enter the blastocoel. This delamination process was examined using a cell-binding assay to follow changes in affinities between mesenchyme cells and their three substrates: hyalin, early gastrula cells, and basal lamina. Sixteen-cell-stage micromeres (the precursors of primary mesenchyme cells), and mesenchyme cells obtained from mesenchyme-blastula-stage embryos were used in conjunction with micromeres raised in culture to intermediate ages. The micromeres exhibited an affinity for hyalin, but the affinity was lost at the time of mesenchyme ingression in vivo. Similarly, micromeres had an affinity for monolayers of gastrula cells but the older mesenchyme cells lost much of their cell-to-cell affinity. Presumptive ectoderm and endoderm cells tested against the gastrula monolayers showed no decrease in binding over the same time interval. When micromeres and primary mesenchyme cells were tested against basal lamina preparations, there was an increase in affinity that was associated with developmental time. Presumptive ectoderm and endoderm cells showed no change in affinity over the same interval. Binding measurements using isolated basal laminar components identified fibronectin as one molecule for which the wandering primary mesenchyme cells acquired a specific affinity. The data indicate that as the presumptive mesenchyme cells leave the vegetal plate of the embryo they lose affinities for hyalin and for neighboring cells, and gain an affinity for fibronectin associated with the basal lamina and extracellular matrix that lines the blastocoel.  相似文献   

19.
SYNTHESIS AND STORAGE OF MICROTUBULE PROTEINS BY SEA URCHIN EMBRYOS   总被引:12,自引:7,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Studies employing colchicine binding, precipitation with vinblastine sulfate, and acrylamide gel electrophoresis confirm earlier proposals that Arbacia punctulata and Lytechinus pictus eggs and embryos contain a store of microtubule proteins. Treatment of 150,000 g supernatants from sea urchin homogenates with vinblastine sulfate precipitates about 5% of the total soluble protein, and 75% of the colchicine-binding activity. Electrophoretic examination of the precipitate reveals two very prominent bands. These have migration rates identical to those of the A and B microtubule proteins of cilia. These proteins can be made radioactive at the 16 cell stage and at hatching by pulse labeling with tritiated amino acids. By labeling for 1 hr with leucine-3H in early cleavage, then culturing embryos in the presence of unlabeled leucine, removal of newly synthesized microtubule proteins from the soluble pool can be demonstrated. Incorporation of labeled amino acids into microtubule proteins is not affected by culturing embryos continuously in 20 µg/ml of actinomycin D. Microtubule proteins appear, therefore, to be synthesized on "maternal" messenger RNA. This provides the first protein encoded by stored or "masked" mRNA in sea urchin embryos to be identified.  相似文献   

20.
Exogastrula-inducing peptides are present in eggs and embryos of the sea urchin Anthocidaris crassispina . They induce exogastrulation when added exogenously to the embryos. In the present study, we investigated an EGIP-D-binding protein in the embryos. EGIP-D was incubated with homogenates of embryos. EGIP-D was then cross-linked to the binding protein by use of disuccinimidyl suberate (DSS) and the complex was analyzed by western blotting with an EGIP-D-specific antibody. A 30-kDa protein was detected in both eggs and embryos. To examine the localization of this protein, EGIP-D was added to intact embryos, cross-linked to proteins by use of DSS, and the complexes were again analyzed by western blotting. The EGIP-D-binding protein was detected in intact embryos but not in embryos treated with Ca2+- and Mg2+-free seawater (CMF-SW) that removes the hyaline layer (HL). It appeared, therefore, that this protein was present on the outer surface of the embryo, being a constituent of the HL. The CMF-SW extract that contained EGIP-D-binding protein, inhibited the induction of exogastrulation by EGIP-D. Furthermore, the treatment of embryos with CMF-SW prevented EGIP-D from inducing exogastrulation. Our observations indicate that the interaction between EGIP-D and the binding protein is a prerequisite for induction of exogastrulation by EGIP-D.  相似文献   

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