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1.
Barriers to polyspermy (fertilization of a female gamete by more than one sperm) are essential to successful reproduction in a wide range of organisms including mammals, echinoderms, fish, molluscs, and algae. In animals and fucoid algae, polyspermy results in early death of the zygote due to transmission of extra centrioles from the sperm and consequent disruptions to the mitotic spindle. Accordingly, a variety of mechanisms have evolved to prevent penetration of an egg by more than one sperm, or more than one sperm nucleus from fusing with an egg nucleus. The evolution of internal fertilization has also provided an opportunity to limit the number of sperm that gain access to each egg, as occurs in the mammalian female reproductive tract. Polyspermy and polyspermy barriers in plants have received much less attention. Plants lack centrioles and therefore, polyspermy would not be expected to cause lethal aberrant spindle organization. However, we find evidence from cytological, genetic and in vitro fertilization studies for polyspermy barriers in plants. Angiosperms, like mammals, are internally fertilized, and exert a high level of control over the number of sperm that have access to each female gamete. In particular, regulation of pollen tube growth ensures that in general only two sperm enter each embryo sac, where one fertilizes the egg and the other the central cell. Despite this 1:1 ratio of sperm to gametes within the embryo sac, angiosperms still require a mechanism to ensure that each female gamete is fertilized by one and only one sperm. Here, we present evidence suggesting that a polyspermy block on the egg may be part of the mechanism that promotes faithful double fertilization.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
In 27% DeBoer's saline (DBS), which yields maximum fertility rates, Xenopus eggs fertilized in vitro are monospermic, regardless of sperm concentration. One block to polyspermy (the “slow” block), described previously, occurs at the fertilization envelope that is elevated in response to the cortical reaction. This paper describes properties of an earlier, “fast” block at the plasma membrane and evaluates the functional significance of the two blocks at physiological sperm concentrations in natural mating conditions. Unfertilized eggs have a resting membrane potential of ?19 mV in 27% DBS. Fertilization triggers a rapid depolarization to +8 mV (the fertilization potential, FP); the potential remains positive for ca. 15 min. Activation of eggs with the ionophore, A23187, produces a slower but similar depolarization (the activation potential, AP). As in other amphibian eggs, the FP appears to result from a net efflux of Cl?, since the peak of the FP (or the AP in ionophore-activated eggs) decreases as the concentration of chloride salts in the medium is increased. In 67% DBS no FP or AP is observed; eggs fertilized in 67% DBS become polyspermic and average 2 sperm entry sites per egg. In the 5–37 mM range, I? and Br?, but not F?, are more effective than Cl? in producing polyspermy. In 20 mM NaI the plasma membrane hyperpolarizes in response to sperm or ionophore; 100% levels of polyspermy and an average of 14 sperm entry sites per egg are observed. NaI does not inhibit or retard elevation of the fertilization envelope; the cortical reaction and fertilization envelope are normal in transmission electron micrographs. In 67% DBS, which also inhibits the fast block, the slow block was estimated to become functional 6–8 min after insemination. Eggs fertilized by natural mating in 20 mM NaI exhibit polyspermy levels of 50–90% and average 5 sperm entry sites per egg. Since eggs become polyspermic when fertilized by natural mating under conditions that inhibit the fast, but not the slow, block to polyspermy, we conclude that the fast block is essential to the prevention of polyspermy at the sperm concentrations normally encountered by the egg.  相似文献   

4.
In this report, unpublished and recent findings concerning the structure and function of the ascidian egg coat are compiled in context with fertilization. In the initial stage of ascidian fertilization, sperm interact with a complex egg investment that consists of a layer of follicle cells attached to an acellular vitelline coat. Increasing evidence exists that ascidian sperm are activated at their encounter with the follicle cells. The molecular basis of sperm-follicle cell interactions is discussed in context with sperm binding, membrane proteins and sperm bound glycosidase. The model that suggests a block to polyspermy established by glycosidase released from the follicle cells on fertilization is evaluated and compared with assured facts. Although a number of questions remain to be answered, our recent findings that a cloned beta-hexosaminidase from P. mammillata binds exclusively to the follicle cells of unfertilized but not fertilized eggs, indicates that the follicle cells participate in the block to polyspermy. A dual function, mediating sperm activation and a block to polyspermy attributes to the ascidian follicle cells a key position in fertilization.  相似文献   

5.
For free-spawning organisms that release gametes into the sea, sperm limitation (too few sperm to fertilize all eggs) is a major factor limiting reproductive success. Given such circumstances, the presence of several mechanisms to prevent polyspermy (too many sperm) may seem paradoxical; however, a growing body of data suggests that natural fertilization levels, though variable, can routinely be high. Under such conditions, polyspermy is much more likely. The tension between sperm limitation and polyspermy represents sexual conflict because males, in competing to fertilize as many eggs as possible, can impose lethal costs on eggs if multiple sperm gain entry. Here we present data for a marine invertebrate indicating high levels of polyspermy under sperm-limited conditions. When the sea urchin Evechinus chloroticus was induced to spawn in situ, mean rates of polyspermy were [Formula: see text], and polyspermy was recorded at rates as high as 62.7%. Polyspermy was nearly always present, even when fertilization rates were <50%, confirming predictions that it should be present under sperm-limited conditions. Both sperm limitation and polyspermy imposed substantial reproductive costs, and we conclude that both sexual conflict related to polyspermy and sperm limitation have been simultaneous strong selective forces shaping the evolution of reproductive traits in the sea.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Dubuc A  Sirard MA 《Theriogenology》1996,46(3):449-458
A high incidence of polyspermy occurs in porcine in vitro fertilization. It is also known that in vivo, the oviductal cells and their secretions play an important role in fertilization and early development. Vesicles from oviductal cells from different parts of the oviduct (isthmus or ampulla) pretreated with estradiol or progesterone or ethanol were used to assess their role in the fertilization process. Oviductal cells were co-cultured with 0.5 million motile sperm/ml for 30 min. A 10-microl sample (spermatozoa bound with the cells) was added to 40-microl droplets of fertilization medium containing 5 oocytes. After 15 to 18 h, oocytes were examined for penetration and monospermy. The results show a lower penetration rate with oviductal cells than that of the control. The use of oviductal cells from the isthmus treated with estradiol significantly decreased the percentage of polyspermy compared with that of ampulla treated with the estradiol or with the control. When the isthmus cells were treated with progesterone, an increase in the incidence of polyspermy was observed. Therefore, it is possible to use oviductal cells to increase the incidence of monospermy in porcine in vitro fertilization; moreover, estradiol increases the proportion of monospermy when added to isthmus-derived oviductal cells.  相似文献   

8.
The egg's blocks to polyspermy (fertilization of an egg by more than one sperm) were originally identified in marine and aquatic species with external fertilization, but polyspermy matters in mammalian reproduction too. Embryonic triploidy is a noteworthy event associated with pregnancy complications and loss. Polyspermy is a major cause of triploidy with up to 80% of triploid conceptuses being the result of dispermic fertilization. The mammalian female reproductive tract regulates the number of sperm that reach the site of fertilization, but mammals also utilize egg‐based blocks to polyspermy. The egg‐based blocks occur on the mammalian egg coat (the zona pellucida) and the egg plasma membrane, with apparent variation between different mammalian species regarding the extent to which one or both are used. The zona pellucida block to polyspermy has some similarities to the slow block in water‐dwelling species, but the mammalian membrane block to polyspermy differs substantially from the fast electrical block that has been characterized in marine and aquatic species. This review discusses what is known about the incidence of polyspermy in mammals and about the mammalian membrane block to polyspermy, as well as notes some lesser‐characterized potential mechanisms contributing to polyspermy prevention in mammals.  相似文献   

9.
The newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, exhibits physiological polyspermic fertilization, in which several sperm enter an egg before egg activation. An intracellular Ca2+ increase occurs as a Ca2+ wave at each sperm entry site in the polyspermic egg. Some Ca2+ waves are preceded by a transient spike-like Ca2+ increase, probably caused by a tryptic protease in the sperm acrosome at the contact of sperm on the egg surface. The following Ca2+ wave was induced by a sperm factor derived from sperm cytoplasm after sperm–egg membrane fusion. The Ca2+ increase in the isolated, cell-free cytoplasm indicates that the endoplasmic reticulum is the major Ca2+ store for the Ca2+ 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   

10.
To ensure normal development, most animals have evolved a number of mechanisms to block polyspermy including prevention of binding to surface coats as well as sperm-egg fusion. Ascidian sperm bind to vitelline coat (VC) glycosides. In the genus Ascidia, N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) is the ligand to which sperm bind. The number of sperm bound to the VC is biphasic following fertilization; sperm binding increases through the first minute or so, then abruptly declines. At fertilization, the eggs of Ascidia callosa, A. ceratodes, A. mentula, A. nigra and Phallusia mammillata release N-acetylglucosaminidase into the sea water (SW). This has been shown to inactivate VC GlcNAc groups, blocking the binding of supernumerary sperm and polyspermy in A. nigra. This block to polyspermy is inactivated by GlcNAc (2mM) or 150 mM-Na+ (choline substituted) SW. These treatments are not additive and therefore probably affect the same process. In A. callosa, fertilization in low Na+ SW causes a 60% decline in enzyme release and a similar increase in the number of sperm remaining on the VC at 4 min as well as a great increase in polyspermy. Thus the principal block to polyspermy in ascidian eggs involves the release of N-acetylglucosaminidase which appears to be Na+ dependent. Enzyme activity is found in the supernatant SW by 15 s after fertilization, suggesting that it is stored very near the egg surface. Histochemical staining of whole eggs and embryos shows loss of surface-associated enzyme activity following fertilization. Like other lysosomal enzymes this N-acetylglucosaminidase is mannosylated and has an acidic pH optimum.  相似文献   

11.
Y Iwao 《Developmental biology》1989,134(2):438-445
At fertilization, the egg of the primitive urodele, Hynobius nebulosus, produced a fertilization potential which rose from -12 to +47 mV. A similar activation potential was elicited by pricking with a needle, by applying A23187, or by electric shock. The potential change was mediated by an increased permeability to Cl-. Clamping the egg's membrane potential at +40 mV blocked fertilization, while clamping at +20 mV induced polyspermy. These results indicated the occurrence of an electrical polyspermy block, typical of anurans, but atypical of urodeles. Furthermore, Hynobius eggs fertilized by natural mating incorporated only one sperm nucleus, and experimentally polyspermic eggs underwent multipolar division. Accessory sperm did not degenerate in the egg cytoplasm, indicating lack of an intracellular polyspermy block. By comparison, fertilization of Bufo japonicus (anuran) was also voltage dependent, whereas that of Cynops pyrrhogaster (urodele) was voltage independent. Thus polyspermy prevention mechanisms in Hynobius closely resemble those of anuran amphibians and differ from those of higher urodeles.  相似文献   

12.
Developmental failure caused by excess sperm (polyspermy) is thought to be an important mechanism driving the evolution of gamete-recognition proteins, reproductive isolation, and speciation in marine organisms. However, these theories assume that there is heritable variation in the susceptibility to polyspermy and that this variation is related to the overall affinity between sperm and eggs. These assumptions have not been critically examined. We investigated the relationship between ease of fertilization and susceptibility to polyspermy within and among three congeneric sea urchins. The results from laboratory studies indicate that, both within and among species, individuals and species that produce eggs capable of fertilization at relatively low sperm concentrations are more susceptible to polyspermy, whereas individuals and species producing eggs that require higher concentrations of sperm to be fertilized are more resistant to polyspermy. This relationship sets the stage for selection on gamete traits that depend on sperm availability and for sexual conflict that can influence the evolution of gamete-recognition proteins and eventually lead to reproductive isolation.  相似文献   

13.
Recent evidence suggests roles for egg derived hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and ovoperoxidase (secreted by cortical granules) in both fertilization envelope hardening and the block to polyspermy in sea urchins. Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs were found to release H2O2 during the cortical reaction at fertilization. Treatment of sperm with equivalent concentrations of H2O2 resulted in a rapid loss of sperm fertilizing ability. Attempts were made to induce polyspermy by utilizing ovoperoxidase inhibitors at concentrations known to inhibit fertilization envelope hardening. Eggs fertilized in phenylhydrazine became polyspermic, while 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole-treated eggs did not. These data suggested that a sperm peroxidase might be involved in preventing polyspermy. This hypothesis was tested by the addition of phenylhydrazine or 3-amino-1,2,4-trizaole to H2O2-treated sperm. Phenylhydrazine acted to protect sperm fertility from H2O2, while 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole increased the adverse effect of H2O2. Simultaneous addition of both inhibitors to sperm incubated in H2O2 gave an intermediate value of sperm fertility. These data indicate that (1) H2O2 generated by sea urchin eggs during the cortical reaction at fertilization is used for two separate processes, fertilization envelope hardening and the prevention of polyspermy; (2) ovoperoxidase is probably not involved in preventing polyspermy; and (3) egg-derived H2O2 reacts directly with sperm enzymes to prevent polyspermy. The phenylhydrazine-sensitive enzyme in the sperm is probably a peroxidase that acts to inactivate sperm, while the 3-amino-1,2,4-triazolesensitive enzyme is probably a catalase which protects sperm from H2O2. This hypothesis is consistent with model experiments on horseradish peroxidase and bovine liver catalase.  相似文献   

14.
The mechanisms responsible for the plasma membrane associated block to polyspermy in mouse eggs were studied. Reinsemination experiments using zona-free eggs indicated that, after fertilization, the egg plasma membrane is altered such that sperm binding to the egg plasma membrane is blocked, except in the region of the second polar body. Activation of the egg with either ethanol or strontium chloride did not result in a block to polyspermic penetration, as artificially activated eggs displayed identical penetration levels as to nonactivated control eggs. The penetrability of activated eggs was not altered by the presence or absence of the zona pellucida during activation. Lectin staining for egg cortical granule material indicated that activation did cause cortical granule exocytosis; however, activated eggs remained penetrable. These data support the following conclusions: (1) an alteration in the ability of the egg plasma membrane to allow sperm adherence accounts for the block to polyspermy; (2) establishment of the plasma membrane block to polyspermy is sperm dependent, since artificial egg activation does not result in a block response; (3) the contents of the egg's cortical granules do not play a role in the establishment of the plasmalemma block response. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
Benzohydroxamic acid (BHA) is a competitive inhibitor of the sea urchin sperm peroxidase. We now report that addition of BHA to fertilization cultures of Arbacia punctulata promotes polyspermy. This effect is dose and sperm density dependent. The cortical reaction (elevation of the fertilization envelope) is not retarded by BHA. BHA must be added to the cultures before the eggs complete the cortical reaction at 60 sec post insemination in order to induce polyspermy. Since sea urchin eggs release H2O2 during the cortical reaction at fertilization, these findings support our hypothesis that the sperm peroxidase has a functional role in helping to prevent polyspermy.  相似文献   

16.
R E Hinkley  B D Wright 《Teratology》1986,34(3):291-301
The volatile anesthetic halothane, when present at fertilization, dose-dependently increases the incidence of abnormally developing sea urchin embryos at the first cell division. Microscopic examinations of eggs stained with aceto-orcein or the DNA fluorochrome bisbenzimide and direct observations on isolated sperm aster complexes show that halothane induces polyspermy (multiple sperm entry) when present at fertilization. Experimental evidence suggests that anesthetic-induced polyspermy involves impairment of both the fast (electrically mediated) and slow (morphological) blocks to multiple sperm entry. These observations clearly show that relatively brief exposures to halothane at fertilization cause polyspermy and that this effect is almost certainly responsible for the ensuing abnormal development observed at the first cell division.  相似文献   

17.
Sea urchin eggs are known to release H2O2 during the cortical reaction at fertilization to help prevent polyspermy by inactivating excess sperm in the vicinity. This process resembles the peroxidatic killing of bacteria by phagocytic leukocytes during inflammation. Associated with these reactions in leukocytes, arachidonic acid is released from phospholipids and can be oxidized via the cyclooxygenase pathway to produce prostaglandins. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) that are cyclooxygenase inhibitors in somatic cells were used to determine whether Arbacia punctulata and Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs use these processes to help prevent polyspermy. The potent cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin causes a dose (10–100 μM) and sperm density dependent induction of polyspermy if added before the egg completes the cortical reaction. It does not retard elevation of the fertilization envelope and does not promote polyspermy by protecting sperm from peroxidatic inactivation by egg-derived H2O2. Other potent cyclooxygenase inhibitors, flufenamate and meclofenamate, also induce polyspermy at 10–60 μM. Aspirin, a weak cyclooxygenase inhibitor in somatic cells, does not cause polyspermy at 5 mM. These findings provide evidence that prostaglandins or other cyclooxygenase-derived metabolites may help assure monospermic fertilization in sea urchins.  相似文献   

18.
Sperm entry into the oocyte of the starfish, Asterina pectinifera, was prevented when the membrane potential of the oocyte was held more positive than −10 to −5 mV, and multiple sperm entries were induced when the potential was held more negative. Based on this potential-dependent fertilization block mechanism, it was demonstrated that an activation potential (AVP) which is induced immediately after the attachment of the first sperm to the egg surface plays the role of a fast polyspermy block. The AVP-mediated polyspermy block mechanism develops as the oocyte matures and deteriorates as it ages. AVPs of mature oocytes exceeded −5 mV (the critical potential level for fertilization block) within 1 sec, and the potential stayed at +12 mV even after the initiation of fertilization membrane elevation. Consequently, the entry of a second sperm is prevented. In contrast, AVPs of overripe oocytes took about 15 sec to attain −5 mV, or they did not attain −5 mV at all. In overripe oocytes multiple sperm entries were associated with “step depolarization(s)” in the rising phase of the AVPs before membrane elevation took place. Immature oocytes generated AVPs associated with sperm entries, but without membrane elevation. AVPs in immature oocytes were characterized by the step depolarization(s) in the rising phase, and an AVP could be evoked again by a second insemination 20 min after the first insemination. These findings indicate that immature oocytes lack both fast and slow polyspermy block mechanisms.  相似文献   

19.
Ascidians (invertebrate chordates) are very abundant in many marine subtidal areas. They often live in dense multispecies clumps; thus, interspecific competition for space may be intense. Although most noncolonial species are broadcast spawners, their eggs can be fertilized only by sperm of the same species (1). Multiple fertilization is lethal and all animals have evolved blocks to polyspermy. Ascidian eggs block polyspermy by enzymatic (2) and electrical mechanisms (3). Sperm bind to N-acetylglucosamine groups on the vitelline coat (4, 5, 6, 7). Follice cells surrounding the vitelline coat release N-acetylglucosaminidase during egg activation (8), preventing the binding of all sperm but a few (2). I show here that this interaction is not species-specific; sperm from one species can cause glycosidase release from follicle cells of a second species. Furthermore, once glycosidase release has been induced, the subsequent addition of sperm from the egg-producing species fails to fertilize a substantial proportion of these eggs. This leads to the hypothesis that sperm from one species of ascidian can interfere with fertilization of a second species. While intraspecific sperm competition has been well documented in several taxa (9, 10), this is the first record of sperm competition between species, or interspecific sperm competition.  相似文献   

20.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,123(6):1431-1440
The mammalian egg must be fertilized by only one sperm to prevent polyploidy. In most mammals studied to date, the primary block to polyspermy occurs at the zona pellucida, the mammalian egg coat, after exocytosis of the contents of the cortical granules into the perivitelline space. The exudate acts on the zona, causing it to lose its ability to bind sperm and to be penetrated by sperm previously bound to the zona. However, the cortical granule components responsible for the zona block have not been identified. Studies described herein demonstrate that N-acetylglucosaminidase is localized in cortical granules and is responsible for the loss in sperm-binding activity leading to the zona block to polyspermy. Before fertilization, sperm initially bind to the zona by an interaction between sperm surface GalTase and terminal N-acetylglucosamine residues on specific oligosaccharides of the zona glycoprotein ZP3 (Miller, D. J., M. B. Macek, and B. D. Shur. 1992. Nature (Lond.). 357:589-593). These GalTase-binding sites are lost from ZP3 after fertilization, an effect that can be duplicated by N-acetylglucosaminidase treatment. Therefore, N-acetylglucosaminidase, or a related glycosidase, may be present in cortical granules and be responsible for ZP3's loss of sperm-binding activity at fertilization. Of eight glycosidases assayed in exudates of ionophore-activated eggs, N-acetylglucosaminidase was 10-fold higher than any other activity. The enzyme was localized to cortical granules using immunoelectron microscopy. Approximately 70 or 90% of the enzyme was released from cortical granules after ionophore activation or in vivo fertilization, respectively. The isoform of N- acetylglucosaminidase found in cortical granules was identified as beta- hexosaminidase B, the beta, beta homodimer. Inhibition of N- acetylglucosaminidase released from activated eggs, with either competitive inhibitors or with specific antibodies, resulted in polyspermic binding to the zona pellucida. Another glycosidase inhibitor or nonimmune antibodies had no effect on sperm binding to activated eggs. Therefore, egg cortical granule N-acetylglucosaminidase is released at fertilization, where it inactivates the sperm GalTase- binding site, accounting for the block in sperm binding to the zona pellucida.  相似文献   

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