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1.
Latrunculin A, a marine toxin from a Red Sea sponge, is a potent inhibitor of the microfilament-mediated processes of fertilization and early development in sea urchins and in mice. Sperm from sea urchins, but not those from Limulus or mice, were affected by latrunculin, and fertilization in both sea urchins and in mice was arrested but at different stages. Sea urchin sperm treated with 2.6 microM latrunculin are unable to assemble acrosomal processes and their ability to fertilize eggs is impaired. The unwinding of the Limulus sperm acrosomal process occurs in the presence of latrunculin. Treated mouse sperm are able to fertilize mouse oocytes in vitro, suggesting that microfilaments may not be required in this mammalian sperm. In sea urchin eggs, sperm incorporation, microvillar elongation and cytokinesis are inhibited. Microtubule-mediated motility occurs normally. 20 nM latrunculin prevents the morphogenetic movements during gastrulation. It reduces the viscosity of actin gels from sea urchin egg homogenates. In unfertilized mouse oocytes, it prevents the colcemid-induced dispersion of the meiotic chromosomes; accumulations of cortical actin are noted adjacent to the scattered chromosomes. Sperm incorporation during mouse fertilization in vitro is unaffected suggesting that sperm entry may occur independent of microfilament activity in mammals. However, the apposition of the pronuclei at the center of the egg cytoplasm does not occur, providing evidence that cytoplasmic microfilaments may be required for the motions leading to pronuclear union during mouse fertilization. It inhibits the second polar body formation and cytokinesis. These results indicate that latrunculin is a potent inhibitor of microfilament-mediated processes in sperm, eggs and embryos, and that it may prove to be a powerful new drug for exploring the cellular behavior of microfilaments in the maintenance of cell shape and during motility.  相似文献   

2.
Jaspisin, originally isolated from a marine sponge as an inhibitor of the hatching of the sea urchin (Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus) embryo, causes inhibition of sea urchin fertilization. Electron microscopic examination revealed that the acrosome reaction was induced in jaspisin-treated sperm when they were incubated with an intact egg. The acrosome-reacted sperm bound to the vitelline layer by the acrosomal material surrounding the acrosomal process. However, fusion of the acrosomal process and the egg plasma membrane failed to take place. Membrane potential changes were monitored using eggs preloaded with a membrane potential-sensitive fluorochrome, di-8-ANEPPS. Depolarization of the membrane potential, normally observed in the fertilized egg was not observed in the egg inseminated in the presence of jaspisin, indicating the absence of electrical continuity between the jaspisin-treated egg and sperm. Jaspisin inhibited the activities of matrix metallo-endoproteinase members but not of other types of proteinases. These results provide strong, albeit indirect, evidence that a matrix metallo-endoproteinase(s) is involved in the process of gamete fusion during sea urchin fertilization.  相似文献   

3.
Evidence for sperm-borne proteolytic enzymes exposed during the acrosome reaction in sea urchin sperm has been accumulating. To investigate the possible role(s) such enzymes have in fertilization, we studied the effects of several protease inhibitors on sperm-related events. Soybean trypsin inhibitor, Nα-p-tosyl-l-lysine, chloromethyl ketone, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and chymostatin neither reduced the number of acrosome reactions nor interfered with gamete binding. p-Nitrophenyl-p′-guanidinobenzoate caused sperm to fuse into irregular clumps, rendering them unable to fertilize eggs. However, l-1-tosylamide-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone (TPCK), an inhibitor of chymotrypsin, prevented the acrosome reaction in Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, S. droebachiensis, and Lytechinus pictus. The effects of TPCK on sperm in subsequent steps of fertilization were also investigated. First, gamete binding assays were performed on fixed eggs. This precluded any effects TPCK might have had on egg-derived secretions (e.g., proteases). Binding of prereacted sperm occurred with both fixed and living eggs. However, fertilization of living eggs in the presence of TPCK was greatly reduced, even though sperm had been prereacted with egg jelly. Vitelline coats were then removed from eggs by trypsin treatment. Eggs in TPCK fertilized and developed normally after the above treatment. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis of a sperm protease participating in the acrosome reaction and the penetration of the egg vitelline coat in the sea urchin.  相似文献   

4.
In the starfish Astropecten aurantiacus the acrosome reaction occurs when the spermatozoon contacts the outer surface of the jelly layer. A long thin acrosomal filament is extruded from the anterior region of the spermatozoon and establishes contact with the oocyte surface. This latter interaction initiates the movement of the spermatozoon to the oocyte surface, formation of the fertilization cone and the cortical reaction. The first detectable electrical change across the oocyte plasma membrane during interaction with the spermatozoon is the fertilization potential (FP) which occurs simultaneously with the cortical reaction. The FP is probably the electrical result of the modification of the oocyte plasma membrane during cortical exocytosis. There are no primary step-like depolarizations during fertilization of starfish oocytes, which contrasts with the situation in sea urchin eggs [see 13]. We suggest that the difference in electrical response to fertilization of starfish oocytes and sea urchin eggs may be attributed to the location of the acrosome reaction in these animals and not to their different meiotic states.  相似文献   

5.
Using gametes from the sea urchins Arbacia punctulata and Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, we have evaluated the role of the acrosome reaction and the sperm-egg binding process in the block to interspecific fertilization among echinoids. The results indicate that sperm preinduced to undergo the acrosomal reaction by two different methods still bind to homologous eggs in a species specific manner. These results, taken in conjunction with an earlier study on species specificity of jelly coat induction of the acrosomal reaction (SeGall and Lennarz 1978), indicate that both the acrosome reaction and the sperm binding process contribute to the species specificity of fertilization in S. purpuratus and A. punctulata.  相似文献   

6.
A wealth of evidence shows that protein-carbohydrate recognition mediates the steps of gamete interaction during fertilization. Carbohydrate-recognition domains (CRDs) comprise a large family of ancient protein modules of approximately 120 amino acids, having the same protein fold, that bind terminal sugar residues on glycoproteins and polysaccharides. Sea urchin sperm express three suREJ (sea urchin receptor for egg jelly) proteins on their plasma membranes. suREJ1 has two CRDs, whereas suREJ2 and suREJ3 both have one CRD. suREJ1 binds the fucose sulfate polymer (FSP) of egg jelly to induce the sperm acrosome reaction. The structure of FSP is species specific. Therefore, the suREJ1 CRDs could encode molecular recognition between sperm and egg underlying the species-specific induction of the acrosome reaction. The functions of suREJ2 and suREJ3 have not been explored, but suREJ3 is exclusively localized on the plasma membrane over the sperm acrosomal vesicle and is physically associated with sea urchin polycystin-2, a known cation channel. An evolutionary analysis of these four CRDs was performed for six sea urchin species. Phylogenetic analysis shows that these CRDs were already differentiated in the common ancestor of these six sea urchins. The CRD phylogeny agrees with previous work on these species based on one nuclear gene and several mitochondrial genes. Maximum likelihood shows that positive selection acts on these four CRDs. Threading the suREJ CRDs onto the prototypic CRD crystal structure shows that many of the sites under positive selection are on extended loops, which are involved in saccharide binding. This is the first demonstration of positive selection in CRDs and is another example of positive selection acting on the evolution of gamete-recognition proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Interphylum crossing was examined between sea urchin eggs (Temnopleurus hardwicki) and oyster sperm (Crassostrea gigas). The eggs could receive the spermatozoa with or without cortical change. The fertilized eggs that elevated the fertilization envelope began their embryogenesis. Electron microscopy revealed that oyster spermatozoa underwent acrosome reaction on the sea urchin vitelline coat, and their acrosomal membrane fused with the egg plasma membrane after the appearance of an intricate membranous structure in the boundary between the acrosomal process and the egg cytoplasm. Oyster spermatozoa penetrated sometimes into sea urchin eggs without stimulating cortical granule discharge and consequently without fertilization envelope formation. The organelles derived from oyster spermatozoa seemed to be functionally inactive in the eggs whose cortex remained unchanged.  相似文献   

8.
That a small amount of external calcium ions is requisite for the fertilization by spermatozoa with reacted acrosomes was found by some simple experiments using jelly-treated sperm of the sea urchin, Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus. When eggs were inseminated with the jelly-treated sperm in artificial seawaters containing calcium at various concentrations, the percentage of fertilization decreased concomitant with the reduction in the amount of external calcium ions, 50% at 40 μM calcium and almost 0% at less than 10 μM. On the other hand, it was observed that both the morphology of the reacted acrosome and the binding capacity of the jelly-treated spermatozoa to eggs were not influenced by the calcium deficiency. These results suggest that external calcium ions are indispensable even for the fertilization processes following sperm binding to eggs after the acrosome reaction, such as penetration of reacted spermatozoa through vitelline layer and/or membrane fusion between egg and spermatozoon.  相似文献   

9.
Depolarization of the sea urchin egg's membrane is required for two processes during fertilization: the entry of the fertilizing sperm and the block to polyspermy which prevents the entry of supernumerary sperm. In an immature sea urchin oocyte, the depolarization is very small in response to the attachment of a sperm. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the depolarization evoked by sperm attaching to an oocyte can facilitate sperm entry or induce the block to polyspermy. Individual oocytes of the sea urchin with diameters which ranged from 86 to 102% that of the average diameter for mature eggs from the same female were examined. The oocytes have a membrane potential of -73 +/- 6 mV (SD, n = 80) and a very low input resistance compared to that of mature eggs. Single sperm, following attachment to an oocyte, elicit a brief, small depolarization with a maximum amplitude of 8 +/- 1.4 mV (SE, n = 15), frequently followed by the formation of tiny filament-like fertilization cones, but the sperm fail to enter. If oocytes are voltage-clamped at membrane potentials more negative than -20 mV, following attachment of the sperm small transient inward currents occur, similar filament-like cones form, and the sperm do not enter. When many sperm attach to an oocyte which is not voltage clamped, the depolarizations sum to create a large depolarization with an amplitude of 60 to 80 mV, which shifts the oocyte's membrane potential to a value between -10 and +5 mV; more positive values are not attained. At such membrane potentials, whether the potential is maintained by the summed depolarizations of many attached sperm or by voltage clamp, large fertilization cones form, the sperm enter, and the oocytes can become highly polyspermic. In oocytes voltage clamped at +20 mV, however, both sperm entry and fertilization cone formation are suppressed. Therefore, both types of voltage-dependence for sperm entry are present in oocytes, although the depolarization caused by a single sperm is not large enough to permit its entry, nor is the depolarization caused by many sperm sufficient to prevent the entry of supernumerary sperm.  相似文献   

10.
The evolution of barriers to inter-specific hybridization is a crucial step in the fertilization of free spawning marine invertebrates. In sea urchins, molecular recognition between sperm and egg ensures species recognition. Here we review the sulfated polysaccharide-based mechanism of sperm-egg recognition in this model organism. The jelly surrounding sea urchin eggs is not a simple accessory structure; it is molecularly complex and intimately involved in gamete recognition. It contains sulfated polysaccharides, sialoglycans and peptides. The sulfated polysaccharides have unique structures, composed of repetitive units of alpha-L-fucose or alpha-L-galactose, which differ among species in the sulfation pattern and/or the position of the glycosidic linkage. The egg jelly sulfated polysaccharides show species-specificity in inducing the sperm acrosome reaction, which is regulated by the structure of the saccharide chain and its sulfation pattern. Other components of the egg jelly do not possess acrosome reaction inducing activity, but sialoglycans act in synergy with the sulfated polysaccharide, potentiating its activity. The system we describe establishes a new view of cell-cell interaction in the sea urchin model system. Here, structural changes in egg jelly polysaccharides modulate cell-cell recognition and species-specificity leading to exocytosis of the acrosome. Therefore, sulfated polysaccharides, in addition to their known functions as growth factors, coagulation factors and selectin binding partners, also function in fertilization. The differentiation of these molecules may play a role in sea urchin speciation.  相似文献   

11.
Sea urchin and human sperm contain receptors for neurotransmitters and psychoactive drugs, including cannabinoid receptors (CNRs). Anandamide, arachidonoylethanolamide (AEA), is a lipid-signal molecule that is an endogenous agonist for CNRs. AEA is enyzmatically released from membrane phospholipids when neurons are stimulated. Retrograde AEA signals from depolarized postsynaptic neurons inhibit neurotransmitter release at synapses in mammalian brain. Analogous processes regulate sperm functions during fertilization in sea urchins. AEA and (-)delta9tetrahydrocannabinol [(-)delta9THC], the major psychoactive constituent of marijuana, inhibit fertilization by blocking acrosomal exocytosis/acrosome reactions (AR) stimulated by egg jelly. The acrosome is a Golgi-derived secretory granule in sperm analogous to synaptic vesicles in neurons. AEA and (-)delta9THC do not block ionophore-induced AR, suggesting that they inhibit AR by modulating signal transduction event(s) before opening of ion channels. Unfertilized sea urchin eggs have enzymes required to release AEA from membrane phospholipids. These results indicate that sea urchin eggs may release AEA after activation by the fertilizing sperm. Released AEA may then react with CNRs in nearby sperm to block AR, thereby helping to prevent polyspermy. AEA is present in human seminal plasma, midcycle oviductal fluid, and follicular fluid. Sperm are sequentially exposed to these fluids as they move from the vagina to the site of fertilization in the oviduct. R-methanandamide (AM-356), a metabolically stable AEA analog, and (-)delta9THC modulate capacitation and fertilizing potential of human sperm in vitro. These findings suggest that AEA signaling directly affects sperm functions required for fertilization and provide additional evidence for common signaling processes in neurons and sperm.  相似文献   

12.
Motility and the behavior and inheritance of centrosomes are investigated during mouse and sea urchin fertilization. Sperm incorporation in sea urchins requires microfilament activity in both sperm and eggs as tested with Latrunculin A, a novel inhibitor of microfilament assembly. In contrast the mouse spermhead is incorporated in the presence of microfilament inhibitors indicating an absence of microfilament activity at this stage. Pronuclear apposition is arrested by microfilament inhibitors in fertilized mouse oocytes. The migrations of the sperm and egg nuclei during sea urchin fertilization are dependent on microtubules organized into a radial monastral array, the sperm aster. Microtubule activity is also required during pronuclear apposition in the mouse egg, but they are organized by numerous egg cytoplasmic sites. By the use of an autoimmune antibody to centrosomal material, centrosomes are detected in sea urchin sperm but not in unfertilized eggs. The sea urchin centrosome expands and duplicates during first interphase and condenses to form the mitotic poles during division. Remarkably mouse sperm do not appear to have the centrosomal antigen and instead centrosomes are found in the unfertilized oocyte. These results indicate that both microfilaments and microtubules are required for the successful completion of fertilization in both sea urchins and mice, but at different stages. Furthermore they demonstrate that centrosomes are contributed by the sperm during sea urchin fertilization, but they might be maternally inherited in mammals.  相似文献   

13.
High concentration of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate in sea urchin sperm   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We measured inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) content of sea urchin gametes by using a specific protein binding assay, and found that a spermatozoon contains 4 x 10(-19) to 1 x 10(-18) moles of InsP3 before the acrosome reaction. Since the acrosome reaction has previously been shown to increase the InsP3 content of sperm severalfold, our measurement indicates that a spermatozoon contains at least 2 x 10(-18) moles of InsP3 at fertilization, corresponding to a concentration in the spermatozoon of about 1 mM. The threshold for activation of eggs by injection of InsP3 dissolved in a much larger volume of solution has been found to be about 3 x 10(-18) moles, corresponding to a concentration in the injectate of 1 microM. This suggests that sea urchin sperm may contain enough InsP3 to activate eggs. With an electroporation method, we also showed that sperm extract acts on eggs only from inside, consistent with a primary messenger role for InsP3.  相似文献   

14.
The roles of sperm proteasomes in fertilization were investigated in the sea urchin Pseudocentrotus depressus. Two proteasome inhibitors, MG-132 and MG-115, inhibited fertilization at 100 microM, whereas chymostatin and leupeptin showed no inhibition. Among three proteasome substrates, Z-Leu-Leu-Glu-MCA showed the strongest inhibition toward fertilization. MG-132 inhibited the egg-jelly-induced, but not ionomycin-induced, acrosome reaction. In addition, MG-132, but not E-64-d, inhibited fertilization of dejellied eggs by acrosome-reacted sperm. MG-132 showed no significant inhibition toward the binding of reacted sperm to the vitelline layer. Proteasomes were detected by Western blotting in the acrosomal contents, which are partially released upon exocytosis. We also found that the inhibition pattern of the caspase-like activity of the proteasome in the acrosomal contents by chymostatin and proteasome inhibitors coincided well with their inhibitory abilities toward fertilization. Furthermore, the vitelline layer of unfertilized eggs appears to be ubiquitinated as revealed by immunocytochemistry and Western blotting. Extracellular ATP, required for the degradation of ubiquitinated proteins by the proteasome, was also necessary for fertilization. These results indicate that the sperm proteasome plays a key role not only in the acrosome reaction but also in sperm penetration through the vitelline envelope, most probably as a lysin, during sea urchin fertilization.  相似文献   

15.
Extracts of the jelly coat of eggs of several marine invertebrates are known to induce in homologous sperm morphological changes known as the acrosome reaction. When sperm of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus are treated with low concentrations (0.2 μg fucose/ml) of egg jelly coat or 30 mM CaCl2 in artificial seawater the acrosome reaction does not occur. However, either of these treatments causes the exposure of an acrosin-like enzyme to exogenous substrate and inhibitors. Subsequent addition of jelly coat to 3.7 μg fucose/ml to sperm in this “initial stage” induces the acrosome reaction (as judged by the appearance of an acrosomal filament). This concentration is also effective for untreated sperm. If inhibitors of the enzyme (diisopropylphosphofluoridate or phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride) are added to sperm in the initial stage, no acrosomal filaments are observed when the high concentration of jelly coat is added. Whether other morphological changes occur in these sperm has not been examined. If phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride is added 4 sec after the jelly coat, the acrosomal filaments are observed, but the sperm still fail to fertilize eggs. These results suggest a dual role for the acrosin-like enzyme(s), first in the mechanism of the acrosomal filament formation and then in a subsequent event in the fertilization process.  相似文献   

16.
Over the past 40 years evidence from many sources has indicated that the mammalian acrosome reaction occurs within or near the cumulus oophorus. Recently, however, workers investigating in vitro fertilization in the mouse have concluded that in this system the acrosome reaction takes place on the surface of the zona pellucida. We have investigated the interaction of rat spermatozoa and the zona pellucida by using the scanning electron microscope (SEM) and two monoclonal antibodies which are directed to antigens of the rat sperm acrosome. When in vitro inseminated eggs from which the cumulus has been removed are viewed with the SEM some sperm heads on the surface of the zona pellucida appear unaltered whereas others appear to be undergoing changes. In vivo, all displayed altered head morphology. Using immunogold labeling we found that the two antibodies employed, 2C4 and 5B1, were directed to acrosomal content and vesiculating acrosomal membranes. Immunofluoresence staining of zonae pellucidae in in vitro fertilization studies revealed numerous small positive regions. These were presumably acrosomal content and membranes which had been left on the zona surface by spermatozoa which had been associated with the zona surface. Our results suggest that the rat acrosome interacts with the zona pellucida. During this interaction some acrosomal content and membranes detach from the spermatozoon and remain on the surface of the zona pellucida.  相似文献   

17.
Cyclin B synthesis is required for sea urchin oocyte maturation   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Sea urchins are members of a limited group of animals in which meiotic maturation of oocytes is completed prior to fertilization. This is different from oocytes of most animals such as mammals and amphibians in which fertilization reactivates an arrested meiotic cycle. Using a recently developed technique for in vitro maturation of sea urchin oocytes, we analyzed the role of cyclin B, the regulatory component of maturation-promoting factor, in the control of sea urchin oocyte meiotic induction and progression. Oocytes of the sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus accumulate significant amounts of cyclin B mRNA and protein during oogenesis. We analyzed cyclin B synthetic requirements in oocytes and early embryos by inhibiting cyclin B synthesis with DNA and morpholino antisense oligonucleotides. Cyclin B synthesis is not necessary for the entry of G2-arrested oocytes into meiosis; however, it is required for the proper progression through meiotic divisions. Surprisingly, mature sea urchin eggs contain significant cyclin B protein following meiosis that serves as a maternal store for early cleavage divisions. We also find that cyclin A can functionally substitute for cyclin B in early embryos but not in oocytes. These studies provide a foundation for understanding the mechanism of meiotic maturation independent of the zygotic cell cycle.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome oxidase activity via cytochrome c, as demonstrated by the diaminobenzidine procedure, has been employed in this electron microscope cytochemical study to determine the respiratory potency, integrity and fate of the Arbacia sperm mitochondrion at fertilization and during early embryogenesis. The sperm mitochondrion remained intact and was intensely positive for cytochrome oxidase activity both during and after penetration into the egg. The mitochondrion remained highly reactive throughout zygote formation, up to the eight-cell stage. The sperm mitochondrion formed many projections and buds in the cytoplasm of immature oocytes, monospermic and polyspermic eggs, and in blastomeres. At all stages of early embryogenesis, close juxtaposition and structural contact were observed between the highly reactive sperm mitochondrion and the less reactive egg mitochondria. The results suggest that following fertilization the mitochondrion of the sea urchin spermatozoon retains some degree of metabolic autonomy within the ooplasm. The structural integrity of the paternal mitochondrion is maintained along with a functional respiratory enzyme system (cytochrome c-a3). The hypothesis that the fertilizing sperm mitochondrion may have some relevance to sea urchin development is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Spermatozoa of the mussel Cyprina islandica and the nemertine Malacobdella grossa have been adddd to oocytes and mature eggs of the sea urchin Psammechinus miliaris. No spermatozoa were found to attach to the surface of the mature eggs which also remained unactivated throughout the experiments. Spermatozoa of both species were found to reach the oocyte surface and to become attached there. The interaction between egg and sperm was different in the two species and different from the situation of a sea urchin sperm on the sea urchin oocyte. The nemertine sperm was found to penetrate the cortex of the oocyte in a fashion resembling phagocytosis. The mussel sperm was partly surrounded by thin protrusions from the sea urchin oocyte which extended along a major portion of the sperm head.  相似文献   

20.
《Developmental biology》1986,117(1):306-318
Protein was isolated from the ring-shaped acrosomal granules of Urechis sperm which bound tightly to Urechis egg surface coats and also initiated development. The acrosomal protein preparation migrated as a single major band in acetic acid-urea PAGE, had a lysine + arginine content of ∼50%, and lacked carbohydrate. The molecular mass of the acrosomal protein was 25,000–30,000 Da in cetyltrimethylammonium bromide PAGE. Acrosomal rings of acrosomereacted sperm were selectively labeled with fluorescamine and the fluorescence persisted throughout the isolation procedure and was observed in the major band on gels. Although the acrosomal protein and Urechis sperm protamine had similar amino acid contents and migrated similarly in acetic acid-urea gels, acrosomal protein differed from protamine by its relative insolubility in hot 5% trichloroacetic acid and cold 0.25 N H2SO4, by its migration in cetyl- and tetratrimethylammonium bromide PAGE and in a major spot on its peptide map following thermolysin digestion. Agglutination of eggs by Urechis acrosomal protein was not species-specific and included various echinoderm eggs and algal zygotes as well as Urechis eggs. Both the acrosomal protein preparation and protein extracted from the major band of gels initiated development of Urechis eggs, causing rounding out, elevation of the surface coat, germinal vesicle breakdown, polar body formation, and establishment of a polyspermy block. Polylysine and calf thymus histones were equally effective in activating Urechis eggs, but Urechis sperm protamine was less effective, and salmon sperm protamine, although highly basic, activated only a small percentage of eggs. Urechis acrosomal protein also induced partial elevation of sea urchin egg fertilization envelopes, similar to the response of sea urchin eggs to Urechis sperm. Sea urchin eggs were not activated by polylysine.  相似文献   

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