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1.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,120(6):1337-1346
During the first cell cycle of the ascidian egg, two phases of ooplasmic segregation create distinct cytoplasmic domains that are crucial for later development. We recently defined a domain enriched in ER in the vegetal region of Phallusia mammillata eggs. To explore the possible physiological and developmental function of this ER domain, we here investigate its organization and fate by labeling the ER network in vivo with DiIC16(3), and observing its distribution before and after fertilization in the living egg. In unfertilized eggs, the ER-rich vegetal cortex is overlaid by the ER-poor but mitochondria-rich subcortical myoplasm. Fertilization results in striking rearrangements of the ER network. First, ER accumulates at the vegetal-contraction pole as a thick layer between the plasma membrane and the myoplasm. This accompanies the relocation of the myoplasm toward that region during the first phase of ooplasmic segregation. In other parts of the cytoplasm, ER becomes progressively redistributed into ER-rich and ER- poor microdomains. As the sperm aster grows, ER accumulates in its centrosomal area and along its astral rays. During the second phase of ooplasmic segregation, which takes place once meiosis is completed, the concentrated ER domain at the vegetal-contraction pole moves with the sperm aster and the bulk of the myoplasm toward the future posterior side of the embryo. These results show that after fertilization, ER first accumulates in the vegetal area from which repetitive calcium waves are known to originate (Speksnijder, J. E. 1992. Dev. Biol. 153:259-271). This ER domain subsequently colocalizes with the myoplasm to the presumptive primary muscle cell region.  相似文献   

2.
《Developmental biology》1986,116(1):241-251
The role of the cortex in ooplasmic segregation of the yolky eggs of Tubifex has been studied by epifluorescence microscopy. Living eggs labeled with rhodamine 123 and fine carbon particles placed on the surface showed that, following the second polar body formation, the egg surface cosegregates with subcortical mitochondria in a bipolar fashion, viz. toward the animal and vegetal poles in the animal and vegetal hemispheres, respectively. The egg surface of each pole moves spirally while the equatorial surface appears to remain stationary during this process. The rhodamine-phalloidin staining of whole eggs reveals that actin networks cosegregate with mitochondria. Isolated cortices which were stained with rhodamine-phalloidin demonstrated that cortical actin is organized bipolarly and that, during ooplasmic segregation, it undergoes reorganization directed toward both poles of the egg. The cortical polarity expressed as actin organization is not disrupted by centrifugal force sufficient to stratify the egg cytoplasm into five layers. The surface of a centrifuged egg moves according to the original cortical polarity. This surface movement is accompanied by the reorganization of cortical actin which appears to be identical to that in intact eggs. Other centrifugation experiments have demonstrated that the connection of the subcortical cytoplasm to the cortex is resistant to a centrifugal force of up to 650g. The nature of cortical polarity and its role in ooplasmic segregation are discussed in the light of the present results.  相似文献   

3.
Polarity of the ascidian egg cortex before fertilization.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The unfertilized ascidian egg displays a visible polar organization along its animal-vegetal axis. In particular, the myoplasm, a mitochondria-rich subcortical domain inherited by the blastomeres that differentiate into muscle cells, is mainly situated in the vegetal hemisphere. We show that, in the unfertilized egg, this vegetal domain is enriched in actin and microfilaments and excludes microtubules. This polar distribution of microfilaments and microtubules persists in isolated cortices prepared by shearing eggs attached to a polylysine-coated surface. The isolated cortex is further characterized by an elaborate network of tubules and sheets of endoplasmic reticulum (ER). This cortical ER network is tethered to the plasma membrane at discrete sites, is covered with ribosomes and contains a calsequestrin-like protein. Interestingly, this ER network is distributed in a polar fashion along the animal-vegetal axis of the egg: regions with a dense network consisting mainly of sheets or tightly knit tubes are present in the vegetal hemisphere only, whereas areas characterized by a sparse tubular ER network are uniquely found in the animal hemisphere region. The stability of the polar organization of the cortex was studied by perturbing the distribution of organelles in the egg and depolymerizing microfilaments and microtubules. The polar organization of the cortical ER network persists after treatment of eggs with nocodazole, but is disrupted by treatment with cytochalasin B. In addition, we show that centrifugal forces that displace the cytoplasmic organelles do not alter the appearance and polar organization of the isolated egg cortex. These findings taken together with our previous work suggest that the intrinsic polar distribution of cortical membranous and cytoskeletal components along the animal-vegetal axis of the egg are important for the spatial organization of calcium-dependent events and their developmental consequences.  相似文献   

4.
Many eggs undergo reorganizations that localize determinants specifying the developmental axes and the differentiation of various cell types. In ascidians, fertilization triggers spectacular reorganizations that result in the formation and localization of distinct cytoplasmic domains that are inherited by early blastomeres that develop autonomously. By applying various imaging techniques to the transparent eggs of Phallusia mammillata, we now define 9 events and phases in the reorganization of the surface, cortex and the cytoplasm between fertilization and first cleavage. We show that two of the domains that preexist in the egg (the ER-rich cortical domain and the mitochondria-rich subcortical myoplasm) are localized successively by a microfilament-driven cortical contraction, a microtubule-driven migration and rotation of the sperm aster with respect to the cortex, and finally, a novel microfilament-dependant relaxation of the vegetal cortex. The phases of reorganization we have observed can best be explained in terms of cell cycle-regulated phases of coupling, uncoupling and recoupling of the motions of cortical and subcortical layers (ER-rich cortical domain and mitochondria-rich domain) with respect to the surface of the zygote. At the end of the meiotic cell cycle we can distinguish up to 5 cortical and cytoplasmic domains (including two novel ones; the vegetal body and a yolk-rich domain) layered against the vegetal cortex. We have also analyzed how the myoplasm is partitioned into distinct blastomeres at the 32-cell stage and the effects on development of the ablation of precisely located small fragments. On the basis of our observations and of the ablation/ transplantation experiments done in the zygotes of Phallusia and several other ascidians, we suggest that the determinants for unequal cleavage, gastrulation and for the differentiation of muscle and endoderm cells may reside in 4 distinct cortical and cytoplasmic domains localized in the egg between fertilization and cleavage.  相似文献   

5.
Mature ascidian oocytes are arrested in metaphase of meiosis I (Met I) and display a pronounced animal-vegetal polarity: a small meiotic spindle lies beneath the animal pole, and two adjacent cortical and subcortical domains respectively rich in cortical endoplasmic reticulum and postplasmic/PEM RNAs (cER/mRNA domain) and mitochondria (myoplasm domain) line the equatorial and vegetal regions. Symmetry-breaking events triggered by the fertilizing sperm remodel this primary animal-vegetal (a-v) axis to establish the embryonic (D-V, A-P) axes. To understand how this radial a-v polarity of eggs is established, we have analyzed the distribution of mitochondria, mRNAs, microtubules and chromosomes in pre-vitellogenic, vitellogenic and post-vitellogenic Germinal Vesicle (GV) stage oocytes and in spontaneously maturing oocytes of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis. We show that myoplasm and postplasmic/PEM RNAs move into the oocyte periphery at the end of oogenesis and that polarization along the a-v axis occurs after maturation in several steps which take 3-4 h to be completed. First, the Germinal Vesicle breaks down, and a meiotic spindle forms in the center of the oocyte. Second, the meiotic spindle moves in an apparently random direction towards the cortex. Third, when the microtubular spindle and chromosomes arrive and rotate in the cortex (defining the animal pole), the subcortical myoplasm domain and cortical postplasmic/PEM RNAs are excluded from the animal pole region, thus concentrating in the vegetal hemisphere. The actin cytoskeleton is required for migration of the spindle and subsequent polarization, whereas these events occur normally in the absence of microtubules. Our observations set the stage for understanding the mechanisms governing primary axis establishment and meiotic maturation in ascidians.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Ooplasmic segregation in ascidians includes the movement of the myoplasm, a pigmented cytoplasmic region thought to be involved in the determination of the embryonic muscle and mesenchyme cell lineages, into the vegetal hemisphere of the egg. A myoplasmic cytoskeletal domain (MCD), composed of a cortical actin network (the PML) and an underlying filamentous lattice extending deep into the cytoplasm, is present in this region. The MCD gradually recedes into the vegetal hemisphere during ooplasmic segregation. It has been proposed that the segregation of the myoplasm is mediated by the contraction of the PML. To test this possibility we have examined ooplasmic segregation in eggs in which the internal parts of the MCD were separated from the PML by centrifugal force. Transmission and scanning electron microscopy of eggs extracted with Triton X-100 showed that the PML remained intact when the internal portions of the MCD were displaced and stratified by centrifugation. When stratified eggs were fertilized there were no rearrangements of the visible cytoplasmic inclusions, but the cellular deformations and the recession of the PML characteristic of ooplasmic segregation occurred as usual. The results indicate that the recession of the PML occurs independently of the internal constituents of the MCD and suggest that PML contraction is the motive force for ooplasmic segregation.  相似文献   

7.
Periodic calcium waves cross ascidian eggs after fertilization   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Ascidian eggs respond to fertilization with one to two dozen periodic calcium pulses (J.E. Speksnijder, D.W. Corson, C. Sardet, and L.F. Jaffe, 1989a, Dev. Biol. 135, 182-190). We examined the spatial pattern of these pulses and found that they are initiated in discrete regions from which they propagate as waves. The first few pulses start in the animal hemisphere, whereas the later ones are mostly initiated near the vegetal pole. Such vegetal waves are often followed by a contraction of the egg surface. Since these waves are attenuated as they spread, they repeatedly expose the vegetal pole region to more calcium. The mechanism of these repetitive calcium waves and their possible role in establishing pattern or completing meiosis is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Exposure of uncleaved Xenopus eggs to a centrifugal force directed from the animal pole to the vegetal pole produces larvae with enhanced dorsal structures, which resemble 'hyperdorso-anterior' larvae produced by D2O-treatment at 0.3 normalized time (NT). Optimal conditions are 70 g for 6 min at 20% of the first cell cycle (0.2 NT). Exposure before removal of vegetal pole cortical cytoplasm, which we find has an effect of eliminating dorsal structures, protects eggs from losing their ability to form dorsal axial structures upon removal. In contrast, exposure after a slight ultraviolet (UV)-irradiation, which has virtually no effect on dorsal development, produces larvae with heavily reduced dorsal structures, which resemble 'ventralized' larvae produced by heavy UV-irradiation. Interestingly, none of these treatments prevents cortical rotation. Morphological and histological examinations reveal that exposure to the force causes displacement of both cortical and deep egg components from around the vegetal pole to subequatorial regions. We conclude that exposure to the centrifugal force enhances dorsal structures by displacing dorsal determinants from around the vegetal pole to subequatorial regions broader than normal. This is the first experiment in which displacement of egg components, by methods independent of the rotation, are shown to perturb larval body pattern.  相似文献   

9.
The myoplasm of ascidian eggs is a localized cytoplasmic region containing a unique cytoskeletal domain. During ooplasmic segregation, the myoplasm moves first to the vegetal pole and then to the future posterior region of the fertilized egg, where it subsequently enters the muscle cell lineage during cleavage. In the vegetal pole region, the myoplasm defines a developmental center which later controls gastrulation and embryonic axis formation. In the posterior region, the myoplasm defines another developmental center, which specifies muscle cell development. Evidence is described suggesting that the integrity of the myoplasmic cytoskeletal domain is required for normal embryonic functions of the myoplasm.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied egg activation and ooplasmic segregation in the ascidian Phallusia mammillata using an imaging system that let us simultaneously monitor egg morphology and calcium-dependent aequorin luminescence. After insemination, a wave of highly elevated free calcium crosses the egg with a peak velocity of 8-9 microns/s. A similar wave is seen in egg fertilized in the absence of external calcium. Artificial activation via incubation with WGA also results in a calcium wave, albeit with different temporal and spatial characteristics than in sperm-activated eggs. In eggs in which movement of the sperm nucleus after entry is blocked with cytochalasin D, the sperm aster is formed at the site where the calcium wave had previously started. This indicates that the calcium wave starts where the sperm enters. In 70% of the eggs, the calcium wave starts in the animal hemisphere, which confirms previous observations that there is a preference for sperm to enter this part of the egg (Speksnijder, J. E., L. F. Jaffe, and C. Sardet. 1989. Dev. Biol. 133:180-184). About 30-40 s after the calcium wave starts, a slower (1.4 microns/s) wave of cortical contraction starts near the animal pole. It carries the subcortical cytoplasm to a contraction pole, which forms away from the side of sperm entry and up to 50 degrees away from the vegetal pole. We propose that the point of sperm entry may affect the direction of ooplasmic segregation by causing it to tilt away from the vegetal pole, presumably via some action of the calcium wave.  相似文献   

11.
The peripheral region of ascidian oocytes and zygotes contains five determinants for morphogenesis and differentiation of the embryo. The determinant for the 24 primary muscle cells of the tadpole, macho1, is one of several cortical mRNAs localized in a gradient along the animal-vegetal axis in the oocyte. After fertilization these mRNAs, together with cortical endoplasmic reticulum (cER) and a subcortical mitochondria-rich domain (myoplasm), relocate in two major reorganization phases forming the posterior plasm (postplasm) of the zygote. At the 8-cell stage cortical mRNAs concentrate in a macroscopic cortical structure called the centrosome-attracting body (CAB), forming a characteristic posterior end mark (PEM) in the two posterior vegetal blastomeres. We propose to call the numerous mRNAs showing this particular cortical localization in the posterior region of the embryo postplasmic/PEM RNAs and suggest a nomemclature. We do not know how postplasmic/PEM RNAs reach their polarized distribution in the oocyte cortex but at least PEM1 and macho1 (and probably others) bind to the network of cER retained in isolated cortical fragments. We propose that after fertilization, these postplasmic/PEM mRNAs move in the zygote cortex together with the cER network (cER/mRNA domain) via microfilament- and microtubule-driven translocations. The cER/mRNA domain is localized posteriorly at the time of first cleavage and distributed equally between the first two blastomeres. After the third cleavage, the cER/mRNA domain and dense particles compact to form the CAB in posterior vegetal blastomeres of the 8-cell stage. We discuss the identity of postplasmic/PEM RNAs, how they localize, anchor, relocate and may be translated. We also examine their roles in unequal cleavage and as a source of posterior morphogenetic and differentiation factors.  相似文献   

12.
Body axis formation during embryogenesis results from asymmetric localization of maternal factors in the egg. Shortly before the first cleavage in ascidian eggs, cell polarity along the anteroposterior (A–P) axis is established and the cytoplasmic domain (myoplasm) relocates from the vegetal to the posterior region in a microtubule‐dependent manner. Through immunostaining, tubulin accumulation during this reorganization is observable on the myoplasm cortex. However, more detailed morphological features of microtubules remain relatively unknown. In this study, we invented a new reagent that improves the immunostaining of cortical microtubules and successfully visualized a parallel array of thick microtubules. During reorganization, they covered nearly the entire myoplasm cortical region, beneath the posterior‐vegetal cortex. We designated this microtubule array as CAMP (cortical array of microtubules in posterior vegetal region). During the late phase of reorganization, CAMP shrank and the myoplasm formed a crescent‐like cytoplasmic domain. When the CAMP formation was inhibited by sodium azide, myoplasmic reorganization and A–P axis formation were both abolished, suggesting that CAMP is important for these two processes.  相似文献   

13.
 Cytoplasmic determinants that specify the fate of endoderm, muscle and epidermis cells are known to be localized in specific areas of fertilized eggs of ascidians. The presence of such cytoplasmic determinants in unfertilized eggs was demonstrated in previous studies, but no information has yet been proved about their distribution. To investigate the distribution of cytoplasmic determinants in unfertilized eggs, we devised a method for distinguishing the polarity of unfertilized eggs using vital staining and we performed cytoplasmic-transfer experiments by fusing blastomeres and cytoplasmic fragments from various identified regions of unfertilized eggs. Cytoplasmic fragments, that contained cortical and subcortical material, from five different positions along the animal-vegetal axis were prepared, and they were fused with a4.2 (presumptive-epidermis) or A4.1 (non-epidermis) blastomeres. The ectopic development of endoderm, muscle and epidermis cells that was promoted by the transplanted cytoplasm was assessed by examining the expression of alkaline phosphatase (ALP), myosin and epidermis-specific antigen, respectively. Differentiation of endoderm and muscle was observed at higher frequencies as cytoplasmic fragments closer to the vegetal pole were transplanted. Conversely, formation of epidermis was observed at higher frequencies as cytoplasmic fragments closer to the animal pole were transplanted. The results suggest that, in cortical and subcortical regions of unfertilized ascidian eggs, endoderm and muscle determinants are widely distributed along a gradient, with maximum activity at the vegetal pole, whilst epidermis determinants are also distributed along a gradient but with maximum activity at the animal pole. Recieved: 10 June 1996 / Accepted: 12 September 1996  相似文献   

14.
STRATIFICATION AND SUBSEQUENT BEHAVIOR OF PLANT CELL ORGANELLES   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Living excised roots of pea were centrifuged at 20,000 g for 24 hours, and the behavior of organelles was followed by electron microscopy at various intervals after centrifugation. With these forces, organelles are not perceptibly or irreversibly damaged, nor is the viability of the whole root destroyed. Organelles stratify generally in the order of lipid (centripetal pole), vacuoles, smooth endoplasmic reticulum and dictyosomes, proplastids (without starch), mitochondria, rough endoplasmic reticulum, proplastids with starch. The nucleus distends from the vacuolar region to the extreme centrifugal pole of the cell, while the chromatin and nucleolus seek the centrifugal pole of the nucleus. During the redistribution of organelles the rough endoplasmic reticulum is among the first to reorient, and possible explanations for this are discussed. Mitochondria can be stretched elastically many times their original length, but proplastids seem fairly rigid. Small vacuoles, forced together during centrifugation, apparently may fuse to form a large unit. Lipid droplets, on the other hand, tend to remain separate. Dictyosomes and smooth endoplasmic reticulum layer in the same region of the centrifuged cell, indicating a density similarity between these two organelles.  相似文献   

15.
Immature oocytes or mature eggs of starfish were centrifuged in a sucrose density gradient. They were then separated into two fractions of fragments, nucleate light fragments and anucleate heavy fragments. Vital-staining experiments showed that the oocytes were elongated along the animal-vegetal (AV) axis during the centrifugation in a contrast to centrifuged eggs whose centrifugal axis was not related to the AV axis. The light and heavy oocyte fragments were comprised of animal and vegetal halves of oocytes, respectively. When matured and fertilized, most of the light oocyte fragment-derived embryos failed gastrulation and developed into Dauerblastulae. Two-dimensional gel electrophoretic analysis of fragments revealed that three basic proteins were predominantly enriched in the heavy oocyte fragments but scarcely detected in the light oocyte fragments. One of these proteins, App20, was identified as a homologue of cyclophilin (peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase). The present study provides a simple means of separating a population of starfish oocytes into animal and vegetal halves, thereby enabling us to analyze any difference of components between animal and vegetal cytoplasm of the oocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Ooplasmic segregation, i.e. the accumulation of pole plasm in theTubifex egg, consists of two steps: (1) Cytoplasm devoid of yolk granules and lipid droplets migrates toward the egg periphery and forms a continuous subcortical layer around the whole egg; (2) the subcortical cytoplasm moves along the surface toward the animal pole in the animal hemisphere and toward the vegetal pole in the vegetal hemisphere, and finally accumulates at both poles of the egg to form the animal and vegetal pole plasms. Whereas the subcortical layer increases in volume during the first step, it decreases during the second step. This is ascribed to the compact rearrangement in the subcortical layer of membraneous organelles such as endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria. The number of membraneous organelles associated with the cortical layer increases during the second step. Electron microscopy reveals the presence of microfilaments not only in the cortical layer but also in the subcortical layer. Subcortical microfilaments link membraneous organelles to form networks; some are associated with bundles of cortical microfilaments. The thickness of the cortical layer differs regionally. The pattern of this difference does not change during the second step. On the other hand, the subcortical cytoplasm moves ahead of the stationary cortical layer. The accumulation of pole plasm is blocked by cytochalasin B but not by colchicine. The first step of this process is less sensitive to cytochalasin B than the second step, suggesting that these two steps are controlled by differnt mechanisms. The mechanical aspects of ooplasmic segregation in theTubifex egg are discussed in the light of the present observations.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The fertilized egg of the mollusc Lymnaea stagnalis generates a polarized current pattern as measured with the vibrating probe. Here we investigated the basis of these polar ionic currents. Ionic currents were measured around eggs during the second meiotic division after interference with cytokinesis. Cytokinesis was either displaced by centrifugation or inhibited with cytochalasin or nocodazole. Furthermore, ectopic constrictions were induced with lectin treatment. It appeared that the inward current of the animal pole can be displaced by centrifugation and remains associated with the position of the meiotic apparatus. The influence of the meiotic apparatus on the polar current pattern seems to be directly related to membrane constrictions rather than to karyokinesis. This was demonstrated by a change in current density after induction of an ectopic constriction at the vegetal pole and by the abolishment of currents after cytochalasin treatment. Since the location of the outward current was not sensitive to centrifugation, it may be concluded that the vegetal outward current depends upon properties of the vegetal cortex. On the basis of these results, we conclude that the Lymnaea egg generates two types of ionic currents during the second meiotic division. The first is an inward current activated at the site of membrane constrictions. The second is an outward current associated with the vegetal cortex.  相似文献   

18.
Cellular mechanisms generating the polarized redistribution of maternal Type I postplasmic/PEM mRNAs in ascidian oocytes remain unknown. We have previously shown that PEM-1 mRNA is associated with a network of rough cortical Endoplasmic Reticulum (cER) polarized along the animal-vegetal (a-v) axis forming a cER-mRNA domain in mature oocytes. We now investigate the a-v polarization of this cER-mRNA domain during meiotic maturation using H. roretzi and C. intestinalis. We show that the cER and Hr-PEM-1 aggregate as interconnected cortical patches at the cell periphery before maturation, which uniformly spread out during maturation and form a reticulated organization enriched in the vegetal hemisphere at the end of maturation. Time-lapse video recordings coupled with micromanipulations reveal that stereotyped surface, cortical and cytoplasmic flows accompany the vegetal shift of the cER-mRNA domain and mitochondria-rich myoplasm. Treatments with cytochalasin B and nocodazole indicate that both polarization of the cER-mRNA domain and mitochondria-rich myoplasm and cortical and cytoplasmic flows depend on actin cytoskeleton, but not microtubules. Using cortical fragments prepared from maturing oocytes coupled with high resolution immuno/in situ localization, we have further analyzed the effects of these inhibitors on the reorganizations the cER network and Hr-PEM-1 mRNA. We show that before maturation starts, Hr-PEM-1 mRNAs are already associated with the cER, and actin cytoskeleton inhibitors disturb their association. Finally, we hypothesize that Germinal Vesicle Break Down (GVBD) triggers an actomyosin-dependant cortical flow which directs the a-v polarization of ascidian oocytes.  相似文献   

19.
Eggs from several protostomes (molluscs, annelids, nemerteans, etc.) and two deuterostomes (mammals and ascidians) display repetitive calcium signals. Oscillations in the level of intracellular calcium concentration are occasionally triggered by maturing hormones (as in some molluscs) and mostly observed after fertilization which occurs at different stages of the meiotic cell cycle (oocytes are arrested in prophase, metaphase I or metaphase II). In most eggs examined so far, calcium oscillations last until the end of meiosis just before male and female pronuclei form. This ability depends on the sensitivity of InsP3 channels and on the permeability of the plasma membrane to extracellular calcium. In eggs that undergo cytoplasmic reorganization at fertilization (annelids, nemerteans, ascidians, etc.) the repetitive calcium signals are waves that originate from localized cortical sites that become calcium waves pacemakers. In ascidians we have identified the site of initiation of repetitive calcium waves as an accumulation of endoplasmic reticulum sandwiched between the plasma membrane and an accumulation of mitochondria. We compare and discuss the generation of calcium signals in the different eggs, their relationship with the cell cycle and the possible roles they play during development.  相似文献   

20.
We have used confocal microscopy to measure calcium waves and examine the distribution of tubulin in oocytes of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis during meiosis. We show that the fertilisation calcium wave in these oocytes originates in the vegetal pole. The sperm penetration site and female meiotic apparatus are found at opposite poles of the oocyte at fertilisation, confirming that C. intestinalis sperm enter in the vegetal pole of the oocyte. Following fertilisation, ascidian oocytes are characterised by repetitive calcium waves. Meiosis I-associated waves originate at the vegetal pole of the oocyte, and travel towards the animal pole. In contrast, the calcium waves during meiosis II initiate at the oocyte equator, and cross the oocyte cytoplasm perpendicular to the point of emission of the polar body. Immunolocalisation of tubulin during meiosis II reveals that the male centrosome is also located between animal and vegetal poles prior to initiation of the meiosis II-associated calcium waves, suggesting that the male centrosome influences the origin of these calcium transients. Ascidians are also characterised by an increase in sensitivity to intracellular calcium release after fertilisation. We show that this is not simply an effect of oocyte activation. The data strongly suggest a role for the male centrosome in controlling the mechanism and localisation of post-fertilisation intracellular calcium waves.  相似文献   

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