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1.
We have previously shown that a metabolite of NAD+ generated by an enzyme present in sea urchin eggs and mammalian tissues can mobilize intracellular Ca2+ in the eggs. Structural determination established it to be a cyclized ADP-ribose, and the name cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) has been proposed. In this study, Ca2+ mobilizations induced by cADPR and inositol trisphosphate (IP3) in sea urchin egg homogenates were monitored with Ca2+ indicators and Ca2(+)-specific electrodes. Both methods showed that cADPR can release Ca2+ from egg homogenates. Evidence indicated that it did not act as a nonspecific Ca2(+)-ionophore or as a blocker of the microsomal Ca2(+)-transport; instead, it was likely to be operating through a specific receptor system. This was supported by its half-maximal effective concentration of 18 nM, which was 7 times lower than that of IP3. The receptor for cADPR appeared to be different from that of IP3 because heparin, an inhibitor of IP3 binding, had no effect on the cADPR action. The Ca2+ releases induced by cADPR and IP3 were not additive and had an inverse relationship, indicating overlapping stores were mobilized. Microinjection of cADPR into intact eggs induced transient intracellular Ca2+ changes and activated the cortical reaction. The in vivo effectiveness of cADPR was directly comparable with IP3 and neither required external Ca2+. In addition, both were effective in activating the eggs to undergo multiple nuclear cycles and DNA synthesis. These results suggest that cADPR could function as a second messenger in sea urchin eggs.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of intracellular application of two novel Ca2+ releasing agents have been studied in cultured rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurones by monitoring Ca(2+)-dependent currents as a physiological index of raised free cytosolic Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i). A protein based sperm factor (SF) extracted from mammalian sperm, has been found to trigger Ca2+ oscillations and to sensitize unfertilized mammalian eggs to calcium induced calcium release (CICR). In this study intracellular application of SF activated Ca(2+)-dependent currents in approximately two-thirds of DRG neurones. The SF induced activity was abolished by heat treatment, attenuated by increasing the intracellular Ca2+ buffering capacity of the cells and persisted when extracellular Ca2+ was replaced by Ba2+. In addition, activity could be triggered or potentiated by loading the cells with Ca2+ by activating a series of voltage-gated Ca2+ currents. Ca(2+)-activated inward current activity was also generated by intracellular application of cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR), a metabolite of NAD+, which causes Ca2+ release in sea urchin eggs. This activity could also be enhanced by loading the cells with Ca2+. The cADPR induced activity, but not the SF induced activity, was abolished by depleting the caffeine sensitive Ca2+ store. Ruthenium red markedly attenuated SF induced activity but had little action on cADPR induced activity or caffeine induced activity. Our results indicate that both SF and cADPR release intracellular Ca2+ pools in DRG neurones and that they appear to act on subtly distinct stores or distinct intracellular Ca2+ release mechanisms, possibly by modulating CICR.  相似文献   

3.
Cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) is a metabolite of NAD+ that is as active as inositol trisphosphate (IP3) in mobilizing intracellular Ca2+ in sea urchin eggs. The activity of the enzyme responsible for synthesizing cADPR is found not only in sea urchin eggs but also in various mammalian tissue extracts, suggesting that cADPR may be a general messenger for Ca2+ mobilization in cells. An aqueous soluble enzyme, thought to be an NADase, has been purified recently from the ovotestis of Aplysia californica (Hellmich and Strumwasser, 1991). This paper shows that the Aplysia enzyme catalyzes the conversion of NAD+ to cADPR and nicotinamide. The Aplysia enzyme was purified by fractionating the soluble extract of Aplysia ovotestis on a Spectra/gel CM column. The purified enzyme appeared as a single band of approximately 29,000 Da on SDS-PAGE but could be further separated into multiple peaks by high-resolution, cation-exchange chromatography. All of the protein peaks had enzymatic activity, indicating that the enzyme had multiple forms differing by charge. Analysis of the reaction products of the enzyme by anion-exchange high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) indicated no ADP-ribose was produced; instead, each mole of NAD+ was converted to equimolar of cADPR and nicotinamide. The identification of the product as cADPR was further substantiated by proton NMR and also by its Ca(2+)-mobilizing activity. Addition of the product to sea urchin egg homogenates induced Ca2+ release and desensitized the homogenate to authentic cADPR but not to IP3. Microinjection of the product into sea urchin eggs elicited Ca2+ transients as well as the cortical exocytosis reaction. Therefore, by the criteria of HPLC, NMR, and calcium-mobilizing activity, the product was identical to cADPR. To distinguish the Aplysia enzyme from the conventional NADases that produce ADP-ribose, we propose to name it ADP-ribosyl cyclase.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the effect of glycolytic pathway intermediaries upon Ca(2+) release induced by cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR), inositol 1',4', 5-trisphosphate (IP(3)), and nicotinate adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAADP) in sea urchin egg homogenate. Fructose 1,6, -diphosphate (FDP), at concentrations up to 8 mM, did not induce Ca(2+) release by itself in sea urchin egg homogenate. However, FDP potentiates Ca(2+) release mediated by agonists of the ryanodine channel, such as ryanodine, caffeine, and palmitoyl-CoA. Furthermore, glucose 6-phosphate had similar effects. FDP also potentiates activation of the ryanodine channel mediated by the endogenous nucleotide cADPR. The half-maximal concentration for cADPR-induced Ca(2+) release was decreased approximately 3.5 times by addition of 4 mM FDP. The reverse was also true: addition of subthreshold concentrations of cADPR sensitized the homogenates to FDP. The Ca(2+) release mediated by FDP in the presence of subthreshold concentrations of cADPR was inhibited by antagonists of the ryanodine channel, such as ruthenium red, and by the cADPR inhibitor 8-Br-cADPR. However, inhibition of Ca(2+) release induced by IP(3) or NAADP had no effect upon Ca(2+) release induced by FDP in the presence of low concentrations of cADPR. Furthermore, FDP had inhibitory effects upon Ca(2+) release induced by both IP(3) and NAADP. We propose that the state of cellular intermediary metabolism may regulate cellular Ca(2+) homeostases by switching preferential effects from one intracellular Ca(2+) release channel to another.  相似文献   

5.
Both the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP(3)) and ryanodine receptor pathways contribute to the Ca(2+) transient at fertilization in sea urchin eggs. To date, the precise contribution of each pathway has been difficult to ascertain. Evidence has accumulated to suggest that the InsP(3) receptor pathway has a primary role in causing Ca(2+) release and egg activation. However, this was recently called into question by a report implicating NO as the primary egg activator. In the present study we pursue the hypothesis that NO is a primary egg activator in sea urchin eggs and build on previous findings that an NO/cGMP/cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) pathway is active at fertilization in sea urchin eggs to define its role. Using a fluorescence indicator of NO levels, we have measured both NO and Ca(2+) at fertilization and establish that NO levels rise after, not before, the Ca(2+) wave is initiated and that this rise is Ca(2+)-dependent. By inhibiting the increase in NO at fertilization, we find not that the Ca(2+) transient is abolished but that the duration of the transient is significantly reduced. The latency and rise time of the transient are unaffected. This effect is mirrored by the inhibition of cGMP and cADPR signaling in sea urchin eggs at fertilization. We establish that cADPR is generated at fertilization, at a time comparable to the time of the rise in NO levels. We conclude that NO is unlikely to be a primary egg activator but, rather, acts after the initiation of the Ca(2+) wave to regulate the duration of the fertilization Ca(2+) transient.  相似文献   

6.
The ADP-ribosyl cyclase CD38 whose catalytic domain resides in outside of the cell surface produces the second messenger cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) from NAD(+). cADPR increases intracellular Ca(2+) through the intracellular ryanodine receptor/Ca(2+) release channel (RyR). It has been known that intracellular NAD(+) approaches ecto-CD38 via its export by connexin (Cx43) hemichannels, a component of gap junctions. However, it is unclear how cADPR extracellularly generated by ecto-CD38 approaches intracellular RyR although CD38 itself or nucleoside transporter has been proposed to import cADPR. Moreover, it has been unknown what physiological stimulation can trigger Cx43-mediated export of NAD(+). Here we demonstrate that Cx43 hemichannels, but not CD38, import cADPR to increase intracellular calcium through RyR. We also demonstrate that physiological stimulation such as Fcγ receptor (FcγR) ligation induces calcium mobilization through three sequential steps, Cx43-mediated NAD(+) export, CD38-mediated generation of cADPR and Cx43-mediated cADPR import in J774 cells. Protein kinase A (PKA) activation also induced calcium mobilization in the same way as FcγR stimulation. FcγR stimulation-induced calcium mobilization was blocked by PKA inhibition, indicating that PKA is a linker between FcγR stimulation and NAD(+)/cADPR transport. Cx43 knockdown blocked extracellular cADPR import and extracellular cADPR-induced calcium mobilization in J774 cells. Cx43 overexpression in Cx43-negative cells conferred extracellular cADPR-induced calcium mobilization by the mediation of cADPR import. Our data suggest that Cx43 has a dual function exporting NAD(+) and importing cADPR into the cell to activate intracellular calcium mobilization.  相似文献   

7.
E N Chini 《Journal of applied physiology》2001,91(1):516-21; discussion 504-5
Volatile anesthetics have multiple actions on intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis, including activation of the ryanodine channel (RyR) and sensitization of this channel to agonists such as caffeine and ryanodine. Recently it has been described that the nucleotide cADP-ribose (cADPR) is the endogenous regulator of the RyR in many mammalian cells, and cADPR has been proposed to be a second messenger in many signaling pathways. I investigated the effect of volatile anesthetics on the cADPR signaling system, using sea urchin egg homogenates as a model of intracellular Ca(2+) stores. Ca(2+) uptake and release were monitored in sea urchin egg homogenates by using the fluo-3 fluorescence technique. Activity of the ADP-ribosyl cyclase was monitored by using a fluorometric method using nicotinamide guanine dinucleotide as a substrate. Halothane in concentrations up to 800 microM did not induce Ca(2+) release by itself in sea urchin egg homogenates. However, halothane potentiates the Ca(2+) release mediated by agonists of the ryanodine channel, such as ryanodine. Furthermore, other volatile anesthetics such as isoflurane and sevoflurane had no effect. Halothane also potentiated the activation of the ryanodine channel mediated by the endogenous nucleotide cADPR. The half-maximal concentration for cADPR-induced Ca(2+) release was decreased about three times by addition of 800 microM halothane. The reverse was also true: addition of subthreshold concentrations of cADPR sensitized the homogenates to halothane. In contrast, all the volatile anesthetics used had no effect on the activity of the enzyme that synthesizes cADPR. I propose that the complex effect of volatile anesthetics on intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis may involve modulation of the cADPR signaling system.  相似文献   

8.
Upon fertilisation by sperm, mammalian eggs are activated by a series of intracellular Ca(2+) oscillations that are essential for embryo development. The mechanism by which sperm induces this complex signalling phenomenon is unknown. One proposal is that the sperm introduces an exclusive cytosolic factor into the egg that elicits serial Ca(2+) release. The 'sperm factor' hypothesis has not been ratified because a sperm-specific protein that generates repetitive Ca(2+) transients and egg activation has not been found. We identify a novel, sperm-specific phospholipase C, PLC zeta, that triggers Ca(2+) oscillations in mouse eggs indistinguishable from those at fertilisation. PLC zeta removal from sperm extracts abolishes Ca(2+) release in eggs. Moreover, the PLC zeta content of a single sperm was sufficient to produce Ca(2+) oscillations as well as normal embryo development to blastocyst. Our results are consistent with sperm PLC zeta as the molecular trigger for development of a fertilised egg into an embryo.  相似文献   

9.
ADP-ribosyl cyclase/CD38 is a bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes at its ectocellular domain the synthesis from NAD(+) (cyclase) and the hydrolysis (hydrolase) of the calcium-mobilizing second messenger cyclic ADP ribose (cADPR). Furthermore, CD38 mediates cADPR influx inside a number of cells, thereby inducing Ca(2+) mobilization. Intracellularly, cADPR releases Ca(2+) from ryanodine-sensitive pools, thus activating several Ca(2+)-dependent functions. Among these, the inhibition of osteoclastic-mediated bone resorption has been demonstrated. We found that HOBIT human osteoblastic cells display ADP-ribosyl cyclase activity and we examined the effects of CD38 stimulation on osteoblasts function. Extracellular NAD(+) induced elevation of cytosolic calcium due to both Ca(2+) influx from the extracellular medium and Ca(2+) release from ryanodine-sensitive intracellular stores. Culturing these cells in the presence of NAD(+) caused a complete growth arrest with a time-dependent decrease of cell number and the appearance of apoptotic nuclei. The first changes could be observed after 24 h of treatment and became fully evident after 72-96 h. We propose a role of extracellular NAD(+) in bone homeostatic control.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) is a metabolite of NAD+ which is as active as inositol trisphosphate (IP3) in mobilizing intracellular Ca2+ in sea urchin eggs. The enzyme responsible for synthesizing cADPR is found not only in sea urchin eggs but also in various mammalian tissue extracts, suggesting that it may be a general messenger for Ca2+ mobilization in cells. In this study I address questions of whether an intracellular receptor for cADPR exists and, if so, whether it is different from the IP3 receptor. A procedure employing nitrogen decompression was used to homogenize sea urchin eggs, and the Ca2(+)-storing microsomes were separated from mitochondria and other organelles by Percoll density centrifugation. Radioactive cADPR with high specific activity was produced by incubating [32P]NAD+ with the synthesizing enzyme and the product purified by high pressure liquid chromatography. The enzyme was membrane bound and was isolated from dog brain extracts by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Partial purification of the enzyme was achieved by DEAE ion-exchange chromatography after solubilization with 3-[(cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate. Specific binding of 32P-labeled cADPR to a saturable site on the Ca2(+)-storing microsomes was detected by a filtration assay. Scatchard analysis indicated a binding affinity of about 17 nM and a capacity of about 25 fmol/mg protein. The binding was not affected by either NAD+ (the precursor) or ADP-ribose (the hydrolysis product) at 0.5 microM but was eliminated by 0.3 microM nonlabeled cADPR. The receptor for cADPR appeared to be different from that of IP3 since IP3 was not an effective competitor at a concentration as high as 3 microM. Similarly, heparin at a concentration that inhibits most of the IP3-induced calcium release from the microsomes did not affect the binding. The binding showed a prominent pH optimum at about 6.7. Calcium at 40 microM decreased the binding by about 50%. These dependencies of the binding on pH and Ca2+ are different from those reported for the IP3 receptor and provide further support that the intracellular receptors for cADPR and IP3 are different.  相似文献   

11.
Transient increases, or oscillations, of cytoplasmic free Ca(2+) concentration, [Ca(2+)](i), occur during fertilization of animal egg cells. In sea urchin eggs, the increased Ca(2+) is derived from intracellular stores, but the principal signaling and release system involved has not yet been agreed upon. Possible candidates are the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor/channel (IP(3)R) and the ryanodine receptor/channel (RyR) which is activated by cGMP or cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR). Thus, it seemed that direct measurements of the likely second messenger candidates during sea urchin fertilization would be essential to an understanding of the Ca(2+) signaling pathway. We therefore measured the cGMP, cADPR and inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP(3)) contents of sea urchin eggs during the early stages of fertilization and compared these with the [Ca(2+)](i) rise in the presence or absence of an inhibitor against soluble guanylate cyclase. We obtained three major experimental results: (1) cytosolic cGMP levels began to rise first, followed by cADPR and IP(3) levels, all almost doubling before the explosive increase of [Ca(2+)](i); (2) most of the rise in IP(3) occurred after the Ca(2+) peak; IP(3) production could also be induced by the artificial elevation of [Ca(2+)](i), suggesting the large increase in IP(3) is a consequence, rather than a cause, of the Ca(2+) transient; (3) the measured increase in cGMP was produced by the soluble guanylate cyclase of eggs, and inhibition of soluble guanylate cyclase of eggs diminished the production of both cADPR and IP(3) and the [Ca(2+)](i) increase without the delay of Ca(2+) transients. Taken together, these results suggest that the RyR pathway involving cGMP and cADPR is not solely responsible for the initiating event, but contributes to the Ca(2+) transients by stimulating IP(3) production during fertilization of sea urchin eggs.  相似文献   

12.
In most species, cortical granule exocytosis is characteristic of egg activation by sperm. It is a Ca(2+)-mediated event which results in elevation of the vitelline coat to block permanently the polyspermy at fertilization. We examined the effect of mastoparan, an activator of G-proteins, on the sea urchin egg activation. Mastoparan was able to induce, in a concentration-dependent manner, the egg cortical granule exocytosis; mastoparan-17, an inactive analogue of mastoparan, had no effect. Mastoparan, but not sperm, induced cortical granule exocytosis in eggs preloaded with BAPTA, a Ca(2+) chelator. In isolated egg cortical lawns, which are vitelline layers and membrane fragments with endogenously docked cortical granules, mastoparan induced cortical granule fusion in a Ca(2+)-independent manner. By contrast, mastoparan-17 did not trigger fusion. We conclude that in sea urchin eggs mastoparan stimulates exocytosis at a Ca(2+)-independent late site of the signaling pathway that culminates in cortical granule discharge.  相似文献   

13.
During fertilization of sea urchin eggs, the cytoplasmic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) transiently increases (Ca(2+) transient). Increased [Ca(2+)](i) results from a rapid release from intracellular stores, mediated by one or both of two signaling pathways; inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP(3)) and IP(3) receptor (IP(3)R) or cyclic GMP (cGMP), cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR) and ryanodine receptor (RyR). During fertilization, cGMP and cADPR increase preceding the Ca(2+) transient, suggesting their contribution to this. If the RyR pathway contributed to the Ca(2+) transient, its Ca(2+) releasing activity would develop in parallel with that of the IP(3) system during maturation of oocytes. Sea urchin oocytes were cultivated in vitro and Ca(2+) transients induced by photolysis of caged IP(3) or caged cADPR were measured during maturation. Oocytes spontaneously began to maturate in seawater. More than 50% of oocytes underwent germinal vesicle breakdown within 25 h and the second meiosis within 35 h, but it took more than 24 h until they became functionally identical to in vivo-matured eggs. Both IP(3) and cADPR induced Ca(2+) transients comparable to those of in vivo-matured eggs later than 24 h from the second meiosis. However, cADPR induced a small Ca(2+) transient even before meiosis, whereas IP(3) and sperm almost did not.  相似文献   

14.
Medaka (Oryzias latipes) eggs microinjected with the Ca(2+)-mobilising messenger cyclic adenosine diphosphate ribose (cADPR) underwent a wave of exocytosis of cortical alveoli and were thus activated. The number of eggs activated was sharply dependent on the concentration of cADPR in the pipette, the threshold concentration was approximately 60 nM. After injection, a pronounced latency preceded the onset of cortical alveoli exocytosis; this latency was independent of the concentration of cADPR but decreased markedly with increasing temperature. Heat-treated cADPR, which yields the inert non-cyclised product ADP-ribose, was ineffective in activating eggs. When cADPR was injected into aequorin-loaded eggs, a wave of luminescence arose at the site of cADPR injection and then swept out across the egg with a mean velocity of approximately 13 microns/s; the velocity was independent of the concentration of injected cADPR. In such a large cell (diameter of around 1 mm), this is considerably faster than that possible by simple diffusion of cADPR, which unambiguously demonstrates that cADPR must activate a regenerative process. cADPR has been demonstrated to modulate Ca(2+)-induced Ca2+ release (CICR) via ryanodine receptors (RyRs) in many cell types, and consistent with this was the finding that microinjection of the pharmacological RyR modulator, ryanodine, also activated medaka eggs. These results suggest that a cADPR-sensitive Ca2+ release mechanism is present in the medaka egg, that cADPR is the most potent activator of medaka eggs described to date, and that it activates eggs by triggering a wave of CICR from internal stores that in turn stimulates a wave of exocytosis.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Extensive cell movements accompany formation of the otic placode   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
A centrally important factor in initiating egg activation at fertilization is a rise in free Ca(2+) in the egg cytosol. In echinoderm, ascidian, and vertebrate eggs, the Ca(2+) rise occurs as a result of inositol trisphosphate-mediated release of Ca(2+) from the endoplasmic reticulum. The release of Ca(2+) at fertilization in echinoderm and ascidian eggs requires SH2 domain-mediated activation of a Src family kinase (SFK) and phospholipase C (PLC)gamma. Though some evidence indicates that a SFK and PLC may also function at fertilization in vertebrate eggs, SH2 domain-mediated activation of PLC gamma appears not to be required. Much work has focused on identifying factors from sperm that initiate egg activation at fertilization, either as a result of sperm-egg contact or sperm-egg fusion. Current evidence from studies of ascidian and mammalian fertilization favors a fusion-mediated mechanism; this is supported by experiments indicating that injection of sperm extracts into eggs causes Ca(2+) release by the same pathway as fertilization.  相似文献   

17.
Egg activation at fertilization requires the release of Ca(2+) from the egg's endoplasmic reticulum, and recent evidence has indicated that a Src family kinase (SFK) may function in initiating this signaling pathway in echinoderm eggs. Here, we identify and characterize a SFK from the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, SpSFK1. SpSFK1 RNA is present in eggs, and an antibody made against a SpSFK1 peptide recognizes an approximately 58-kDa egg membrane-associated protein in eggs of S. purpuratus as well as another sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus. Injection of both species of sea urchin eggs with dominant-interfering Src homology 2 domains of SpSFK1 delays and reduces the release of Ca(2+) at fertilization. Injection of an antibody against SpSFK1 into S. purpuratus eggs also causes a small increase in the delay between sperm-egg fusion and Ca(2+) release. In contrast, when injected into eggs of L. variegatus, this same antibody has a dramatic stimulatory effect: it causes PLCgamma-dependent Ca(2+) release like that occurring at fertilization. Correspondingly, in lysates of L. variegatus eggs, but not S. purpuratus eggs, the antibody stimulates SFK activity. Injection of L. variegatus eggs with another antibody that recognizes the L. variegatus egg SFK also causes PLCgamma-dependent Ca(2+) release like that at fertilization. These results indicate that activation of a Src family kinase present in sea urchin eggs is necessary to cause Ca(2+) release at fertilization and is capable of stimulating Ca(2+) release in the unfertilized egg via PLCgamma, as at fertilization.  相似文献   

18.
We have discovered that a single sperm protein, phospholipase C-zeta (PLCζ), can stimulate intracellular Ca(2+) signalling in the unfertilized oocyte ('egg') culminating in the initiation of embryonic development. Upon fertilization by a spermatozoon, the earliest observed signalling event in the dormant egg is a large, transient increase in free Ca(2+) concentration. The fertilized egg responds to the intracellular Ca(2+) rise by completing meiosis. In mammalian eggs, the Ca(2+) signal is delivered as a train of long-lasting cytoplasmic Ca(2+) oscillations that begin soon after gamete fusion and persist beyond the completion of meiosis. Sperm PLCζ effects Ca(2+) release from egg intracellular stores by hydrolyzing the membrane lipid PIP(2) and consequent stimulation of the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP(3) ) receptor Ca(2+) -signalling pathway, leading to egg activation and early embryogenesis. Recent advances have refined our understanding of how PLCζ induces Ca(2+) oscillations in the egg and also suggest its potential dysfunction as a cause of male infertility.  相似文献   

19.
Release of Ca(2+) from intracellular stores at fertilization of mammalian eggs is mediated by inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3), but the mechanism by which the sperm initiates IP3 production is not yet understood. We tested the hypothesis that phospholipase C (PLC) activity introduced into the mouse egg as a consequence of sperm-egg fusion is responsible for causing Ca(2+) release. We demonstrated that microinjecting purified, recombinant PLCgamma1 protein into mouse eggs caused Ca(2+) oscillations like those seen at fertilization. However, the PLC activity in the minimum amount of purified PLCgamma1 protein needed to elicit Ca(2+) release when injected into eggs was approximately 500-900 times the PLC activity contained in a single sperm. This indicates that a single mouse sperm does not contain enough PLC activity to be responsible for causing Ca(2+) release at fertilization. We also examined whether phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) could have a role in this process, and found that several inhibitors of PI3K-mediated signaling had no effect on Ca(2+) release at fertilization.  相似文献   

20.
The newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, exhibits physiological polyspermic fertilization, in which several sperm enter an egg before egg activation. An intracellular Ca(2+) increase occurs as a Ca(2+) wave at each sperm entry site in the polyspermic egg. Some Ca(2+) waves are preceded by a transient spike-like Ca(2+) increase, probably caused by a tryptic protease in the sperm acrosome at the contact of sperm on the egg surface. The following Ca(2+) wave was induced by a sperm factor derived from sperm cytoplasm after sperm-egg membrane fusion. The Ca(2+) increase in the isolated, cell-free cytoplasm indicates that the endoplasmic reticulum is the major Ca(2+) store for the Ca(2+) wave. We previously demonstrated that citrate synthase in the sperm cytoplasm is a major sperm factor for egg activation in newt fertilization. In the present study, we found that the activation by the sperm factor as well as by fertilizing sperm was prevented by an inhibitor of citrate synthase, palmitoyl CoA, and that an injection of acetyl-CoA or oxaloacetate caused egg activation, indicating that the citrate synthase activity is necessary for egg activation at fertilization. In the frog, Xenopus laevis, which exhibits monospermic fertilization, we were unable to activate the eggs with either the homologous sperm extract or the Cynops sperm extract, indicating that Xenopus sperm lack the sperm factor for egg activation and that their eggs are insensitive to the newt sperm factor. The mechanism of egg activation in the monospermy of frog eggs is quite different from that in the physiological polyspermy of newt eggs.  相似文献   

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