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1.
Xenopus oocytes arrested in prophase I resume meiotic division in response to progesterone and arrest at metaphase II. Entry into meiosis I depends on the activation of Cdc2 kinase [M-phase promoting factor (MPF)]. To better understand the role of Cdc2, MPF activity was specifically inhibited by injection of the CDK inhibitor, Cip1. When Cip1 is injected at germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) time, Cdc25 and Plx1 are both dephosphorylated and Cdc2 is rephosphorylated on tyrosine. The autoamplification loop characterizing MPF is therefore not only required for MPF generation before GVBD, but also for its stability during the GVBD period. The ubiquitin ligase anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C), responsible for cyclin degradation, is also under the control of Cdc2; therefore, Cdc2 activity itself induces its own inactivation through cyclin degradation, allowing the exit from the first meiotic division. In contrast, cyclin accumulation, responsible for Cdc2 activity increase allowing entry into metaphase II, is independent of Cdc2. The c-Mos/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway remains active when Cdc2 activity is inhibited at GVBD time. This pathway could be responsible for the sustained cyclin neosynthesis. In contrast, during the metaphase II block, the c-Mos/MAPK pathway depends on Cdc2. Therefore, the metaphase II block depends on a dynamic interplay between MPF and CSF, the c-Mos/MAPK pathway stabilizing cyclin B, whereas in turn, MPF prevents c-Mos degradation.  相似文献   

2.
CDK1-cyclin B1 is a universal cell cycle kinase required for mitotic/meiotic cell cycle entry and its activity needs to decline for mitotic/meiotic exit. During their maturation, mouse oocytes proceed through meiosis I and arrest at second meiotic metaphase with high CDK1-cyclin B1 activity. Meiotic arrest is achieved by the action of a cytostatic factor (CSF), which reduces cyclin B1 degradation. Meiotic arrest is broken by a Ca2+ signal from the sperm that accelerates it. Here we visualised degradation of cyclin B1::GFP in oocytes and found that its degradation rate was the same for both meiotic divisions. Ca2+ was the necessary and sufficient trigger for cyclin B1 destruction during meiosis II; but it played no role during meiosis I and furthermore could not accelerate cyclin B1 destruction during this time. The ability of Ca2+ to trigger cyclin B1 destruction developed in oocytes following a restabilisation of cyclin B1 levels at about 12 h of culture. This was independent of actual first polar body extrusion. Thus, in metaphase I arrested oocytes, Ca2+ would induce cyclin B1 destruction and the first polar body would be extruded. In contrast to some reports in lower species, we found no evidence that oocyte activation was associated with an increase in 26S proteasome activity. We therefore conclude that Ca2+ mediates cyclin B1 degradation by increasing the activity of an E3 ubiquitin ligase. However, this stimulation occurs only in the presence of the ubiquitin ligase inhibitor CSF. We propose a model in which Ca2+ directly stimulates destruction of CSF during mammalian fertilisation.  相似文献   

3.
In Xenopus oocytes, the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) kinase Bub1 is required for cytostatic factor (CSF)-induced metaphase arrest in meiosis II. To investigate whether matured mouse oocytes are kept in metaphase by a SAC-mediated inhibition of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) complex, we injected a dominant-negative Bub1 mutant (Bub1dn) into mouse oocytes undergoing meiosis in vitro. Passage through meiosis I was accelerated, but even though the SAC was disrupted, injected oocytes still arrested at metaphase II. Bub1dn-injected oocytes released from CSF and treated with nocodazole to disrupt the second meiotic spindle proceeded into interphase, whereas noninjected control oocytes remained arrested at metaphase. Similar results were obtained using dominant-negative forms of Mad2 and BubR1, as well as checkpoint resistant dominant APC/C activating forms of Cdc20. Thus, SAC proteins are required for checkpoint functions in meiosis I and II, but, in contrast to frog eggs, the SAC is not required for establishing or maintaining the CSF arrest in mouse oocytes.  相似文献   

4.
The proteasome engages in protein degradation as a regulatory process in biological transactions. Among other cellular processes, the proteasome participates in degradation of ubiquinated cyclins in mitosis. However, its role in meiosis has not been established. Resumption of meiosis in the oocyte involves the activation of maturation promoting factor (MPF), a complex of p34cdc2 and cyclin B. Inactivation of this factor, occurring between the two meiotic divisions, is associated with degradation of cyclin B. In this study, we examined the possible involvement of the proteasome in regulation of the exit from metaphase I in spontaneously maturing rat oocytes. We found that upon resumption of meiosis, proteasomes translocate to the spindle apparatus. We further demonstrated that specific inhibitors of proteasome catalytic activity, MG132 and lactacystin, blocked polar body extrusion. Chromosome and microtubule fluorescent staining verified that MG132-treated oocytes were arrested at metaphase I. Intervention of proteasomal action with this inhibitor also resulted in accumulation of cyclin B and elevated activity of MPF. These data demonstrate that proteasomal catalytic activity is absolutely essential for the decrease in MPF activity and completion of the first meiotic division. Its translocation to the spindle apparatus may facilitate the timely degradation of cyclin B.  相似文献   

5.
N Furuno  Y Ogawa  J Iwashita  N Nakajo    N Sagata 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(13):3860-3865
In vertebrates, M phase-promoting factor (MPF), a universal G2/M regulator in eukaryotic cells, drives meiotic maturation of oocytes, while cytostatic factor (CSF) arrests mature oocytes at metaphase II until fertilization. Cdk2 kinase, a G1/S regulator in higher eukaryotic cells, is activated during meiotic maturation of Xenopus oocytes and, like Mos (an essential component of CSF), is proposed to be involved in metaphase II arrest in mature oocytes. In addition, cdk2 kinase has been shown recently to be essential for MPF activation in Xenopus embryonic mitosis. Here we report injection of Xenopus oocytes with the cdk2 kinase inhibitor p21Cip in order to (re)evaluate the role of cdk2 kinase in oocyte meiosis. Immature oocytes injected with p21Cip can enter both meiosis I and meiosis II normally, as evidenced by the typical fluctuations in MPF activity. Moreover, mature oocytes injected with p21Cip are retained normally in metaphase II for a prolonged period, whereas those injected with neutralizing anti-Mos antibody are released readily from metaphase II arrest. These results argue strongly against a role for cdk2 kinase in MPF activation and its proposed role in metaphase II arrest, in Xenopus oocyte meiosis. We discuss the possibility that cdk2 kinase stored in oocytes may function, as a maternal protein, solely for early embryonic cell cycles.  相似文献   

6.
Fully grown oocytes of most laboratory mice progress without interruption from the germinal vesicle (GV) stage to metaphase II, where meiosis is arrested until fertilization. In contrast, many oocytes of strain LT mice arrest precociously at metaphase I and often undergo subsequent spontaneous parthenogenetic activation. Cytostatic factor (CSF), which prevents the degradation of cyclin B and maintains high maturation-promoting factor (MPF) activity, is required for maintenance of metaphase I-arrest in LT oocytes, similar to its requirement for maintaining metaphase II-arrest in normal oocytes. However, CSF does not instigate metaphase I-arrest since a temporary metaphase I-arrest occurs in MOS-null LT oocytes. This paper addresses the mechanism(s) that may instigate metaphase I-arrest and tests the hypothesis that there may be one or more defects in LT oocytes that delay their acquisition of competence to trigger the cascade of processes that normally drive entry into and progression through anaphase I. To test this hypothesis, MPF activity was artificially abrogated by treating oocytes with a general protein kinase inhibitor, 6-DMAP, at various times during the progression of meiosis I. This allowed a comparison of the time at which LT and normal oocytes become competent to undergo the metaphase I/anaphase transition even if oocytes were arrested at metaphase I when 6-DMAP-treatment was begun. There were no differences between LT and control oocytes in the kinetics of MPF suppression by 6-DMAP. However, it was found that LT oocytes do not acquire competence to undergo the metaphase I/anaphase transition in response to 6-DMAP until 50-60 min after normal oocytes. A similar delay was observed in strain CX8-4 oocytes, which also have a high incidence of metaphase I-arrest, but not in strain CX8-11 oocytes, which exhibit a low incidence of metaphase I-arrest. MOS-null LT oocytes also exhibit a delay in acquisition of competence to undergo the metaphase I/anaphase transition. Thus, a delay in competence to undergo the metaphase I/anaphase transition in response to 6-DMAP-treatment correlates with metaphase I-arrest. It is therefore hypothesized that the observed delay in acquisition of competence to enter anaphase I may instigate the sustained metaphase I-arrest in LT oocytes by allowing CSF activity to rise to a level that prevents cyclin B degradation and maintains high MPF activity before anaphase can be initiated by normal triggering mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
A cytoplasmic activity in mature oocytes responsible for second meiotic metaphase arrest was identified over 30 years ago in amphibian oocytes. In Xenopus oocytes CSF activity is initiated by the progesterone-dependent synthesis of Mos, a MAPK kinase kinase, which activates the MAPK pathway. CSF arrest is mediated by a sole MAPK target, the protein kinase p90Rsk which leads to inhibition of cyclin B degradation by the anaphase-promoting complex. Rsk phosphorylates and activates the Bub1 protein kinase, which may cause metaphase arrest due to inhibition of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) by a conserved mechanism defined genetically in yeast and mammalian cells. CSF arrest in vertebrate oocytes by p90Rsk provides a potential link between the MAPK pathway and the spindle assembly checkpoint in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

8.
Russo GL  Bilotto S  Ciarcia G  Tosti E 《Gene》2009,429(1-2):104-111
In all vertebrates, mature oocytes arrest at the metaphase of the II meiotic division, while some invertebrates arrest at metaphase-I, others at prophase-I. Fertilization induces completion of meiosis and entry into the first mitotic division. Several experimental models have been considered from both vertebrates and invertebrates in order to shed light on the peculiar aspects of meiotic division, such as the regulation of the cytostatic factor (CSF) and the maturation promoting factor (MPF) in metaphase I or II. Recently, we proposed the oocytes of ascidian Ciona intestinalis as a new model to study the meiotic division. Here, taking advantage of the recent publication of the C. intestinalis genome, we presented a phylogenetic analysis of key molecular components of the CSF-related machinery. We showed that the Mos/MAP kinase pathway is perfectly conserved in ascidians. We demonstrated the presence of a CSF-like activity in metaphase-I arrested C. intestinalis oocytes able to block cell division in two-cell embryos. We further investigated the regulation of CSF by demonstrating that both CSF and MPF inactivation, at the exit of metaphase-I, are independent from protein synthesis, indicating the absence of short-lived factors that regulate metaphase stability, as in other invertebrate species. The results obtained suggest that meiotic regulation in C. intestinalis resembles that of vertebrates, such as Xenopus accordingly to the position of this organism in the evolutionary tree.  相似文献   

9.
In Xenopus oocytes, the mos proto-oncogene product is required during meiosis I for the activation of maturation promoting factor (MPF) and the subsequent breakdown of the germinal vesicle (GVBD). In addition, the mos product has been shown to be a candidate "initiator" of meiotic maturation and is an active component of cytostatic factor (CSF), an activity responsible for metaphase II arrest. Here we demonstrate that pp39mos is required throughout oocyte maturation. We found that in progesterone stimulated oocytes, depletion of mos RNA immediately before GVBD terminally decreased MPF. Likewise, oocytes depleted of mos RNA and induced to mature with crude MPF proceeded through GVBD but lacked the MPF activity required to arrest mature oocytes at metaphase II. Thus, during maturation the mos product is required, directly or indirectly, to sustain MPF activity. On the other hand, mouse NIH/3T3 cells transformed by the constitutive expression of pp39mosxc possessed CSF activity but lacked constitutive levels of MPF or its associated histone H1 kinase activity. Moreover, cytosols prepared from transformed NIH/3T3 cells or Xenopus eggs had similar levels of CSF activity, but pp39mos levels were greater than 40-fold higher in the transformed cell extract. These analyses show that maintenance of CSF during interphase does not result in the maintenance of MPF.  相似文献   

10.
Fertilizable mammalian oocytes are arrested at the second meiotic metaphase (mII) by the cyclinB-Cdc2 heterodimer, maturation promoting factor (MPF). MPF is stabilized via the activity of an unidentified cytostatic factor (CSF), thereby suspending meiotic progression until fertilization. We here present evidence that a conserved 71 kDa mammalian orthologue of Xenopus XErp1/Emi2, which we term endogenous meiotic inhibitor 2 (Emi2) is an essential CSF component. Depletion in situ of Emi2 by RNA interference elicited precocious meiotic exit in maturing mouse oocytes. Reduction of Emi2 released mature mII oocytes from cytostatic arrest, frequently inducing cytodegeneration. Mos levels autonomously declined to undetectable levels in mII oocytes. Recombinant Emi2 reduced the propensity of mII oocytes to exit meiosis in response to activating stimuli. Emi2 and Cdc20 proteins mutually interact and Cdc20 ablation negated the ability of Emi2 removal to induce metaphase release. Consistent with this, Cdc20 removal prevented parthenogenetic or sperm-induced meiotic exit. These studies show in intact oocytes that the interaction of Emi2 with Cdc20 links activating stimuli to meiotic resumption at fertilization and during parthenogenesis in mammals.  相似文献   

11.
Oocytes of wild-type mice are ovulated as the secondary oocytes arrested at metaphase of the second meiotic division. Their fertilization or parthenogenetic activation triggers the completion of the second meiotic division followed by the first embryonic interphase. Oocytes of the LT/Sv strain of mice are ovulated either at the first meiotic metaphase (M I) as primary oocytes or in the second meiotic metaphase (M II) as secondary oocytes. We show here that duringin vitromaturation a high proportion of LT/Sv oocytes progresses normally only until metaphase I. In these oocytes MAP kinase activates shortly after histone H1 kinase (MPF) activation and germinal vesicle breakdown. However, MAP kinase activation is slightly earlier than in oocytes from wild-type F1 (CBA/H × C57Bl/10) mice. The first meiotic spindle of these oocytes forms similarly to wild-type oocytes. During aging, however, it increases in size and finally degenerates. In those oocytes which do not remain in metaphase I the extrusion of first polar bodies is highly delayed and starts about 15 h after germinal vesicle breakdown. Most of the oocytes enter interphase directly after first polar body extrusion. Fusion between metaphase I LT/Sv oocytes and wild-type mitotic one-cell embryos results in prolonged M-phase arrest of hybrids in a proportion similar to control LT/Sv oocytes and control hybrids made by fusion of two M I LT/Sv oocytes. This indicates that LT/Sv oocytes develop cytostatic factor during metaphase I. Eventually, anaphase occurs spontaneously and the hybrids extrude the polar body and form pronuclei in a proportion similar as in controls. In hybrids between LT/Sv metaphase I oocytes and wild-type metaphase II oocytes (which contain cytostatic factor) anaphase I proceeds at the time observed in control LT/Sv oocytes and hybrids between two M I LT/Sv oocytes, and is followed by the parthenogenetic activation and formation of interphase nuclei. Also the great majority of hybrids between M I and M II wild-type oocytes undergoes the anaphase but further arrests in a subsequent M-phase. These observations suggest that an internally triggered anaphase I occurs despite the presence of the cytostatic activity both in LT/Sv and wild-type M I oocytes. Anaphase I triggering mechanism must therefore either inactivate or override the CSF activity. The comparison between spontaneous and induced activation of metaphase I LT/Sv oocytes shows that mechanisms involved in anaphase I triggering are altered in these oocytes. Thus, the prolongation of metaphase I in LT/Sv oocytes seems to be determined by delayed anaphase I triggering and not provoked directly by the cytostatic activity.  相似文献   

12.
Recently, it has been shown that the product of the c-mos proto-oncogene is a component of cytostatic factor, an activity present in unfertilized eggs from vertebrates that arrests the cell cycle in metaphase of the second meiotic division (metaphase II) possibly by stabilizing maturation-promoting factor (MPF). We have studied the behavior of the c-mos product in metaphase II mouse oocytes and soon after activation. The amount of c-mos in the oocyte was still very high after second polar body extrusion, when cyclin B has been degraded and MPF activity had decreased dramatically. Degradation of c-mos takes place later, during the G1 phase of the first cell cycle and a residual amount of c-mos is detectable during the first zygotic interphase. Our data show that the degradation of c-mos is not involved in the release from the metaphase arrest.  相似文献   

13.
Vertebrate oocytes arrest in metaphase of the second meiotic division (MII), where they maintain a high cdc2/cyclin B activity and a stable, bipolar spindle because of cytostatic factor (CSF) activity. The Mos-MAPK pathway is essential for establishing CSF. Indeed, oocytes from the mos-/- strain do not arrest in MII and activate without fertilization, as do Xenopus laevis oocytes injected with morpholino oligonucleotides directed against Mos. In Xenopus oocytes, p90Rsk (ribosomal S6 kinase), a MAPK substrate, is the main mediator of CSF activity. We show here that this is not the case in mouse oocytes. The injection of constitutively active mutant forms of Rsk1 and Rsk2 does not induce a cell cycle arrest in two-cell mouse embryos. Moreover, these two mutant forms do not restore MII arrest after their injection into mos-/- oocytes. Eventually, oocytes from the triple Rsk (1, 2, 3) knockout present a normal CSF arrest. We demonstrate that p90Rsk is not involved in the MII arrest of mouse oocytes.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Mammalian oocytes are arrested at the G2/M transition of the first meiotic division from which, after reaching full size and subsequent to an LH surge, they undergo final maturation. Oocyte maturation, which involves germinal vesicle breakdown, progression through metaphase I (MI), and arrest at MII, is triggered and regulated by the coordinated action of two kinases, maturation promoting factor (MPF) and mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK). The importance of the role of MPF in mammalian oocyte maturation is well established, while the role of MAPK, although well understood in mouse oocytes, has not been fully elucidated in oocytes of large domestic species, especially bovine oocytes. Here we show that injection of MKP-1 mRNA, which encodes a dual specificity MAPK phosphatase, into germinal vesicle stage bovine oocytes prevents the activation of MAPK during maturation. Despite the lack of MAPK activity, MKP-1-injected oocytes resume and progress through meiosis, although they are unable to arrest at MII stage and, by 22-26-hour post-maturation, exhibit decondensed pronucleus-like chromatin, a clear sign of parthenogenetic activation. MKP-1-injected bovine oocytes exhibit normal activation of MPF activity; however, by 18-hour post-maturation, MPF activity starts to decline and by 22-26 hr MPF activity is absent. MKP-1-injected oocytes also show disorganized MII spindles with poorly aligned chromosomes. In summary, our results demonstrate that in bovine oocytes MAPK activity is required for MII arrest, maintenance of MPF activity, and spindle organization.  相似文献   

16.
Mammalian eggs naturally arrest at metaphase of the second meiotic division, until sperm triggers a series of Ca(2+) spikes that result in activation of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C). APC/C activation at metaphase targets destruction-box containing substrates, such as cyclin B1 and securin, for degradation, and as such eggs complete the second meiotic division. Cyclin B1 degradation reduces maturation (M-phase)-promoting factor (MPF) activity and securin degradation allows sister chromatid separation. Here we examined the second meiotic division in mouse eggs following expression of a cyclin B1 construct with an N-terminal 90 amino acid deletion (Delta 90 cyclin B1) that was visualized by coupling to EGFP. This cyclin construct was not an APC/C substrate, and so following fertilization, sperm were incapable of stimulating Delta 90 cyclin B1 degradation. In these eggs, chromatin remained condensed and no pronuclei formed. As a consequence of the lack of pronucleus formation, sperm-triggered Ca(2+) spiking continued indefinitely, consistent with a current model in which the sperm-activating factor is localized to the nucleus. Because Ca(2+) spiking was not inhibited by Delta 90 cyclin B1, the degradation timing of securin, visualized by coupling it to EGFP, was unaffected. However, despite rapid securin degradation, sister chromatids remained attached. This was a direct consequence of MPF activity because separation was induced following application of the MPF inhibitor roscovitine. Similar observations regarding the ability of MPF to prevent sister chromatid separation have recently been made in Xenopus egg extracts and in HeLa cells. The results presented here show this mechanism can also occur in intact mammalian eggs and further that this mechanism appears conserved among vertebrates. We present a model in which metaphase II arrest is maintained primarily by MPF levels only.  相似文献   

17.
Sister chromatid separation and cyclin degradation in mitosis depend on the association of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) with the Fizzy protein (Cdc20), leading to the metaphase/anaphase transition and exit from mitosis [1--3]. In Xenopus, after metaphase of the first meiotic division, only partial cyclin degradation occurs, and chromosome segregation during anaphase I proceeds without sister chromatid separation [4--7]. We investigated the role of xFizzy during meiosis using an antisense depletion approach. xFizzy accumulates to high levels in Meiosis I, and injection of antisense oligonucleotides to xFizzy blocks nearly all APC-mediated cyclin B degradation and Cdc2/cyclin B (MPF) inactivation between Meiosis I and II. However, even without APC activation, xFizzy-ablated oocytes progress to Meiosis II as shown by cyclin E synthesis, further accumulation of cyclin B, and evolution of the metaphase I spindle to a metaphase II spindle via a disc-shaped aggregate of microtubules known to follow anaphase I [8]. Inhibition of the MAPK pathway by U0126 in antisense-injected oocytes prevents cyclin B accumulation beyond the level that is present at metaphase I. Full synthesis and accumulation can be restored in the presence of U0126 by the expression of a constitutively active form of the MAPK target, p90(Rsk). Thus, p90(Rsk) is sufficient not only to partially inhibit APC activity [7], but also to stimulate cyclin B synthesis in Meiosis II.  相似文献   

18.
During mouse oocyte maturation the regulation of the activity of a cytoplasmic maturation-promoting factor (MPF) was examined. The mouse MPF activity was determined based on its ability to induce maturation in immature starfish oocytes after microinjection with the cytoplasm from mouse oocytes. MPF appeared initially at germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD), and its activity fluctuated in exact correspondence with meiotic cycles, reaching a peak at each metaphase and almost disappearing at the time of emission of the first polar body. Cycloheximide affected neither the initial MPF appearance nor GVBD. Thereafter, however, in the presence of cycloheximide the meiotic spindle was not formed and MPF disappeared, although the chromosomes remained condensed. After removing cycloheximide, MPF reappeared and was followed by the first metaphase and subsequently by polar body emission. Finally the meiotic cycle progressed to the second metaphase. Thus, for the appearance of MPF, there is a critical period shortly before the first metaphase, after which protein synthesis is required. In the presence of either cytochalasin D or colcemid, MPF activity remained at elevated levels. Addition of cycloheximide to such cytochalasin-treated oocytes, in which the meiotic cycle was arrested at the first metaphase, caused the MPF levels to decrease and was followed by movement of chromosomes to both poles where they decondensed and two nucleus-like structures were formed. Thus, the disappearance of MPF may initiate the metaphase-anaphase transition. Furthermore, detailed cytological examination revealed that chromosomes in cytochalasin-treated oocytes were monovalent while those treated only with cycloheximide were divalent, suggesting that dissociation of the synapsis is a prerequisite for chromosome decondensation after the disappearance of MPF. In all these respects, MPF seems to be a metaphase-promoting factor rather than just a maturation-promoting factor.  相似文献   

19.
In eukaryotes, mitosis entry is induced by activation of maturation‐promoting factor (MPF), which is regulated by a network of kinases and phosphatases. It has been suggested that Greatwall (GWL) kinase was crucial for the M‐phase entry and could maintain cyclin B–Cdc2 activity through regulation of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), a counteracting phosphatase of MPF. Here, the role of GWL was assessed during release of mouse oocytes from prophase I arrest. GWL was crucial for meiotic maturation in mouse oocytes. As a positive regulator for meiosis resumption, GWL was continually expressed in germinal vesicle (GV) and MII stage oocytes and two‐cell stage embryos. Additionally, GWL localized to the nucleus and dispersed into cytoplasm during GV breakdown (GVBD). Furthermore, downregulation of GWL or overexpression of catalytically‐inactive GWL inhibited partial meiotic maturation. This prophase I arrest induced by GWL depletion could be rescued by the PP2A inhibition. However, both GWL‐depleted and rescued oocytes had severe spindle defects that hardly reached MII. In contrast, oocytes overexpressing wild‐type GWL resumed meiosis and progressed to MII stage. Thus, our data demonstrate that GWL acts in a pathway with PP2A which is essential for prophase I exit and metaphase I microtubule assembly in mouse oocytes.  相似文献   

20.
Progression through meiosis requires two waves of maturation promoting factor (MPF) activity corresponding to meiosis I and meiosis II. Frog oocytes contain a pool of inactive "pre-MPF" consisting of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 bound to B-type cyclins, of which we now find three previously unsuspected members, cyclins B3, B4 and B5. Protein synthesis is required to activate pre-MPF, and we show here that this does not require new B-type cyclin synthesis, probably because of a large maternal stockpile of cyclins B2 and B5. This stockpile is degraded after meiosis I and consequently, the activation of MPF for meiosis II requires new cyclin synthesis, principally of cyclins B1 and B4, whose translation is strongly activated after meiosis I. If this wave of new cyclin synthesis is ablated by antisense oligonucleotides, the oocytes degenerate and fail to form a second meiotic spindle. The effects on meiotic progression are even more severe when all new protein synthesis is blocked by cycloheximide added after meiosis I, but can be rescued by injection of indestructible B-type cyclins. B-type cyclins and MPF activity are required to maintain c-mos and MAP kinase activity during meiosis II, and to establish the metaphase arrest at the end of meiotic maturation. We discuss the interdependence of c-mos and MPF, and reveal an important role for translational control of cyclin synthesis between the two meiotic divisions.  相似文献   

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