Na movements and their oscillations during fertilization and the cell cycle in sea urchin eggs |
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Authors: | Patrick Payan Jean-Pierre Girard Richard Christen Christian Sardet |
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Abstract: | ![]() We have analysed in detail the Na+ content and Na+ influx during fertilization and first divisions of the sea urchin egg (Paracentrotus lividus) using a filtration technique devised to eliminate rapidly contamination by the Na+ of external sea water. In the first 5 min following fertilization the egg fills up with Na+ (+ 30%). Thereafter Na+ is extruded and the Na+ content stabilizes at about 60% of the unfertilized egg level by the second cleavage (2 h). The initial increase in Na+ content is due to a large increase in Na+ influx already detected at 20 sec. The Na+ influx reaches its maximum at 1 min and its minimum at 5 min. H+ excretion follows the same kinetics. A second increase in Na+ influx is noted 5–10 min after fertilization; it reaches its maximum at prophase metaphase (30 min) and its minimum during cleavage (60 min). These oscillations in Na+ influx were observed for the first three divisions. Fertilization also immediately stimulates the Na+ efflux which remains elevated throughout the cell cycle and is responsible for the depletion of the Na+ content of the embryos. Activation of the eggs by weak amine bases (5 mM NH4Cl) which bypasses the early cortical reaction produces only a depletion in the Na+ content of the egg similar to that produced by fertilization. NH4Cl also increases the Na+ influx soon after fertilization, although no transient variations are noted. |
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