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1.
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Within the first cell cycle following fertilization the average nucleosomal repeat length of sea urchin male pronuclear chromatin declines by 30-40 base pairs to a value typical of that found in the embryo. This decline occurs after a lag of about 30 min postfertilization, and is accompanied by replication of the male chromatin and accumulation of cleavage-stage (CS) core histone variants. When replication is inhibited by greater than 95% with aphidicolin, the decline in repeat length still occurs, although it is slightly retarded. The decline in repeat length also occurs when protein synthesis is blocked by greater than 98% and DNA synthesis by 60-70% with emetine. The adjustment of nucleosome repeat length therefore can occur in vivo without extensive movement of replication forks across the length of the chromatin, or normal progression of the cell cycle, and appears to require no proteins synthesized postfertilization. Blocking of DNA synthesis or protein synthesis also does not prevent the normal histone variant transitions involved in male pronuclear chromatin remodeling. Although their accumulation is slowed, CS core variants eventually become the predominant male pronuclear histones in their classes when replication is inhibited. Since a shortening of the average nucleosomal repeat length of approximately 10-20% is not sufficient to account for this large acquisition of CS variants, some of the sperm (Sp) core histones are probably displaced from the replication-blocked pronucleus. Therefore, accumulation of CS H2A and CS H2B are temporally correlated with the repeat length transition, whereas replication, normal progression of the cell cycle, and the early histone transitions involving SpH1 and SpH2B are not.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract. Striking developmental changes in histone and histone synthesis in sea urchin embryos were observed in three histone classes, H1, H2A and H2B. In each case there is a shift in histone synthesis from the early cleavage stage types to other types of histones at the morula stage; Two new forms appear after the blastula stage. In addition, multiple changes in histone types were found during gameto-genesis in the male and female gonads where specific histones, different from the embryonic histones, were observed.  相似文献   

4.
The variability of sperm histones was compared in two species of sea urchin. Whole sperm specific histones (SpH), were isolated from Tetrapygus niger (Arbacoida) and Parechinus angulosus (Echinoida). Individual histones were purified by chromatography on BioGel P-60 followed by reverse high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). The heterogeneity of each major histone type from T. niger was established from their HPLC elution patterns and further confirmed by electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gels containing 6 mM Triton X-100 combined with a transverse urea gradient (0--8 M). In T. niger, as well as in P. angulosus, a single form of SpH1 and SpH2A were found. In contrast, SpH2B was found to be heterogeneous, but represented by one major form in both species. The relatedness between both sets of histones was determined by establishing their immunological cross-reactivity. In this context, polyclonal antibodies elicited against T. niger sperm histones were assayed against individual histones from P. angulosus. From the results obtained, it emerged that histone SpH2A was the more closely related protein between these two species, followed by histone SpH1. In contrast, histone SpH2B was found to be only moderately related. These results confirm that SpH2A did not co-evolve with SpH2B, as was predicted for most species.  相似文献   

5.
R H Shutt  L H Kedes 《Cell》1974,3(3):283-290
A qualitative assay for detection of histone mRNA sequences in nuclear RNA was developed using actinomycin D-CsCl gradients to separate histone DNA from bulk DNA by differences in buoyant density. A significant amount of RNA synthesized in vitro in isolated nuclei from early blastula stage sea urchin embryos hybridized coincident with the histone DNA satellite, and this hybridization was competed out by unlabeled “9S” polysomal RNA purified from embryos at the same stage of development. The biogenesis of these histone mRNA sequences appeared similar as observed during in vivo and in vitro synthesis. Nuclear RNA from embryos pulse labeled in vivo was found to lack histone sequences, suggesting a rapid exit time for these sequences from the nucleus. Attempts to study the exit of histone sequences from isolated nuclei labeled in vitro also suggested a rapid exit time for histone sequences. The histone sequences were synthesized to a much lesser extent in isolated nuclei from late blastula stage embryos, as anticipated from the much reduced amount of histone mRNA labeled on polysomes at this stage.  相似文献   

6.
To obtain information on the remodeling of sperm chromatin during male pronuclei formation, we have followed the sperm specific histones (SpH) that form the nucleosomal core by Western immunoblot analysis with polyclonal antibodies directed against the core SpH. The results obtained indicate that the complete set of SpH is absent from zygote chromatin at the beginning of the first S phase. The disappearance of SpH is not coincidental for the five histone classes: SpH4 and SpH3 are lost 5-15 min post insemination (p.i.), SpH2B and SpH2A disappear 20-40 min p.i., and SpH1 is progressively diminished up to 30 min p.i. This order of sperm chromatin remodeling is not affected by the inhibition of protein synthesis by emetine, indicating that the factor(s) responsible for SpH disappearance are present in unfertilized eggs. The lost SpH's are not replaced by newly synthesized CS variants, since the basic proteins synthesized de novo during male pronuclei formation are not incorporated into chromatin remaining in the cytoplasm. These newly synthesized proteins are different from the CS variants as judged by their electrophoretic migration.  相似文献   

7.
At intermediate stages of male pronucleus formation, sperm‐derived chromatin is composed of hybrid nucleoprotein particles formed by sperm H1 (SpH1), dimers of sperm H2A‐H2B (SpH2A‐SpH2B), and a subset of maternal cleavage stage (CS) histone variants. At this stage in vivo, the CS histone variants are poly(ADP‐ribosylated), while SpH2B and SpH1 are phosphorylated. We have postulated previously that the final steps of sperm chromatin remodeling involve a cysteine‐protease (SpH‐protease) that degrades sperm histones in a specific manner, leaving the maternal CS histone variants unaffected. More recently we have reported that the protection of CS histones from degradation is determined by the poly(ADP‐ribose) moiety of these proteins. Because of the selectivity displayed by the SpH‐protease, the coexistence of a subset of SpH together with CS histone variants at intermediate stages of male pronucleus remodeling remains intriguing. Consequently, we have investigated the phosphorylation state of SpH1 and SpH2B in relation to the possible protection of these proteins from proteolytic degradation. Histones H1 and H2B were purified from sperm, phosphorylated in vitro using the recombinant α‐subunit of casein kinase 2, and then used as substrates in the standard assay of the SpH‐protease. The phosphorylated forms of SpH1 and SpH2B were found to remain unaltered, while the nonphosphorylated forms were degraded. On the basis of this result, we postulate a novel role for the phosphorylation of SpH1 and SpH2B that occurs in vivo after fertilization, namely to protect these histones against degradation at intermediate stages of male chromatin remodeling. J. Cell. Biochem. 76:173–180, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
We have measured the ratio of incorporation of 3H-lysine into the maternal and paternal forms of Hl histones synthesized by the interordinal hybrid embryo which results from the fertilization of sand dollar eggs with sea urchin sperm. This ratio has been used to calculate the relative contributions of newly transcribed and stored Hl histones mRNA to the synthesis of Hl histone at five different stages of development. These calculations are based on the assumption that histone mRNA of both parental types is transcribed with equal efficiency from the genome and that these RNAs are translated with equal efficiency in the cytoplasm of the hybrid embryos. On this basis, we have estimated that the contribution of new mRNA represents 80% of total Hl histone synthesis at the 16--32 cell stage, 54% at the hatching blastula stage, 40% at the mesenchyme blastula stage, and 100% after gastrulation. These data are discussed in the light of presently known parameters of histone and histone mRNA synthesis in echinoderm embryos.  相似文献   

9.
At intermediate stages of male pronucleus formation, sperm-derived chromatin is composed of hybrid nucleoprotein particles formed by sperm H1 (SpH1), dimers of sperm H2A-H2B (SpH2A-SpH2B), and a subset of maternal cleavage stage (CS) histone variants. At this stage in vivo, the CS histone variants are poly(ADP-ribosylated), while SpH2B and SpH1 are phosphorylated. We have postulated previously that the final steps of sperm chromatin remodeling involve a cysteine-protease (SpH-protease) that degrades sperm histones in a specific manner, leaving the maternal CS histone variants unaffected. More recently we have reported that the protection of CS histones from degradation is determined by the poly(ADP-ribose) moiety of these proteins. Because of the selectivity displayed by the SpH-protease, the coexistence of a subset of SpH together with CS histone variants at intermediate stages of male pronucleus remodeling remains intriguing. Consequently, we have investigated the phosphorylation state of SpH1 and SpH2B in relation to the possible protection of these proteins from proteolytic degradation. Histones H1 and H2B were purified from sperm, phosphorylated in vitro using the recombinant alpha-subunit of casein kinase 2, and then used as substrates in the standard assay of the SpH-protease. The phosphorylated forms of SpH1 and SpH2B were found to remain unaltered, while the nonphosphorylated forms were degraded. On the basis of this result, we postulate a novel role for the phosphorylation of SpH1 and SpH2B that occurs in vivo after fertilization, namely to protect these histones against degradation at intermediate stages of male chromatin remodeling.  相似文献   

10.
Histone modifications accompanying the onset of developmental commitment   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, three cell types comprise the 16-cell stage embryo: micromeres, macromeres, and mesomeres. We have analyzed these three cell types for nuclear proteins that were synthesized during the earliest stages of embryonic development. The most striking differences in composition of newly synthesized proteins were found between the micromeres, which are the most committed cell type, and the macromeres and mesomeres. First, the micromeres lacked triply modified forms of histone H3; the levels of doubly modified forms of H3 were also greatly reduced. In contrast, micromeres were enriched in a band which migrated at the position of unmodified, unacetylated, histone H3 protein. Second, the overall distribution of H2A histone variants differed among the three cell types. Compared with macromeres and mesomeres, micromeres had a higher ratio of alpha-stage to cleavage-stage (CS) histone H2A; the micromere nuclei were depleted by 50 and 35%, respectively, in embryonically synthesized histone CS-H2A. Third, micromeres displayed different profiles of H1 histones. (a) They contained a cleavage-stage H1 histone which migrated faster than that of macromeres and mesomeres. This protein displays the electrophoretic behavior expected for a protein with reduced levels of posttranslational covalent modification. (b) Micromeres also had reduced levels of an H1 histone (designated H1 alpha a) band found in the alpha-H1 region of macromeres and mesomeres. These changes in chromatin modification correlate with the degree of commitment of cells in the developing embryo; they may reflect differing activities of the chromatin modifying enzymes in the various cell types at the 16-cell stage. Thus, the newly synthesized chromatin proteins of the individual blastomere types already differ in the developing sea urchin by the 16-cell stage. We suggest that variations in histone subtypes and in the levels of activity of chromatin modifying enzymes, e.g., acetylases and phosphorylases, could be involved in commitment and differentiation of different cell types.  相似文献   

11.
Male pronucleus formation involves sperm nucleus decondensation and sperm chromatin remodeling. In sea urchins, male pronucleus decondensation was shown to be modulated by protein kinase C and a cdc2-like kinase sensitive to olomoucine in vitro assays. It was further demonstrated that olomoucine blocks SpH2B and SpH1 phosphorylation. These phosphorylations were postulated to participate in the initial steps of male chromatin remodeling during male pronucleus formation. At final steps of male chromatin remodeling, all sperm histones (SpH) disappear from male chromatin and are subsequently degraded by a cysteine protease. As a result of this remodeling, the SpH are replaced by maternal histone variants (CS). To define if sperm nucleus decondensation is coupled with sperm chromatin remodeling, we have followed the loss of SpH in zygotes treated with olomoucine. SpH degradation was followed with anti-SpH antibodies that had no cross-reactivity with CS histone variants. We found that olomoucine blocks SpH1 and SpH2B phosphorylation and inhibits male pronucleus decondensation in vivo. Interestingly, the normal schedule of SpH degradation remains unaltered in the presence of olomoucine. Taken together these results, it was concluded that male nucleus decondensation is uncoupled from the degradation of SpH associated to male chromatin remodeling. From these results, it also emerges that the phosphorylation of SpH2B and SpH1 is not required for the degradation of the SpH that is concurrent to male chromatin remodeling.  相似文献   

12.
We have measured the ratio of incoropation of 3H-lysine into the maternal and paternal forms of Hl histones synthesized by the interordinal hybrid embryo which results from the fertilization of sand dollar eggs with sea urchin sperm. This ratio has been used to calculate the relative contributions of newly transcribed and stored Hl histone mRNA to the synthesis of Hl histone at five different stages of development. These calculations are based on the assumption that histone mRNA of both parental types is transcribed with equal efficiency from the genome and that these RNAs are translated with equal efficiency in the cytoplasm of the hybrid embryos. On this basis, we have estimated that the contribution of new mRNA respresents 80% of total Hl histone synthesis at the 16–32 cell stage, 54% at the hatching blastula stage, 40% at the mesenchyme blastula stage, and 100% after gastrulation.
These data are discussed in the light of presently known parameters of histone and histone mRNA synthesis in echinoderm embryos.  相似文献   

13.
H2Aα1, the principal H2A histone synthesized prior to the blastula stage of the sea urchin, was isolated free of other putative H2A subtypes and other histones. Its amino acid composition provides confirmation that H2Aα1 is the H2A protein encoded in the histone gene cluster carried by pCO2. An antibody prepared against this protein cross-reacts strongly with CS2A (a putative H2A synthesized only during the cleavage stage) as well as with H2Aβ, H2Aγ, and H2Aδ (putative H2As synthesized principally after the blastula stage) but not with non-H2A core histones or other nuclear proteins. The data support the view that CS2A, H2Aα1, H2Aβ, H2Aγ, and H2Aδ are all H2A proteins.  相似文献   

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Isolated nuclei from sea urchin embryos synthesize RNA at a rate comparable to other animal cell nuclei. All three RNA polymerases are active as judged by alpha-amanitin sensitivity and hybridization to specific cloned DNAs. Extracts were prepared from sea urchin eggs and embryos by extraction with 0.35 M KCl. None of the crude extracts had a large effect on total RNA synthesis. However, extracts from sea urchin eggs inhibited RNA polymerase III activity in nuclei from blastula and gastrula embryos. There was no effect on the synthesis of ribosomal RNA by RNA polymerase I or on the synthesis of two RNA polymerase II products, histone mRNA and the sea urchin analogue of U1 RNA. The inhibitor is present in two different species of sea urchin and has been 50-fold purified by diethylaminoethylcellulose and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The inhibitor is not present in extracts prepared from sea urchin blastula embryos.  相似文献   

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18.
5-azacytidine (5-azaCR), an analogue of cytidine, inhibits nuclear DNA methylation in early sea urchin embryos. This inhibition is specific and dose-dependent. Exposure of sea urchin embryos at any stage between one-cell and blastula, to micromolar quantities of 5-azaCR invariably inhibits development beyond the blastula stage. In a substantial number of embryos arrested at the blastula stage, spicule formation proceeds although other morphological differentiation is lacking. No significant effect on development is seen if sea urchin embryos are exposed to 5-azaCR at post-blastula stages. 5-azaCR also inhibits the development of a mosaic egg such as the ascidian Phallusia mammilata at the blastula stage, indicating that both regulative (sea urchin) and mosaic (ascidian) embryos respond more or less similarly to 5-azaCR treatment.  相似文献   

19.
An electrophoretic characterization of histones from pyloric caeca, testes, and sperm of Asterias vulgaris revealed a sperm/testes-specific variant of histone H1 significantly larger than its somatic counterpart from pyloric caeca. Additional proteins were observed in H1 regions of acetic acid-urea polyacrylamide gels in testicular extracts. Sperm or testis-specific variants of H2B observed in sea urchins were not found in the sea star. Evidence presented suggests that sperm- or testes-specific H1 species of intermediate mobility may arise from a single, slow-migrating H1 species (SpH1). Although an increase in nonspecific DNA binding by nuclear proteins must occur during the process of spermatogenesis, different organisms exhibit various patterns of sperm-specific protein mediating differential binding during the process. Sperm-specific variants of both H1 and H2B histones are observed in sea urchins, while the only variant observed in sea stars during spermatogenesis is SpH1. Sequencing of the N-terminus of SpH1 from A. vulgaris revealed a repeating tetrapeptide in residues 3-6 and 8-11 (Ser-Pro-Arg-Lys and Ser-Pro-Lys-Lys, respectively), homologous to repeats in the N-termini of sperm-specific H1s from sea urchins. Primary structure within critical, variable regions of molecules responsible for nonspecific DNA binding appear conserved in many organisms. The occurrence of repeating tetrapeptides in SpH1 and other DNA binding proteins suggests that such domains may function similarly in various chromatins undergoing regulated or reversible condensation.  相似文献   

20.
The "primitive" sea urchin Eucidaris tribuloides resembles the advanced sea urchins (euechinoids) in many respects, yet some features of its biochemistry and morphogenesis are more similar to other echinoderms such as starfish or sea cucumbers. Two unique characteristics of the sperm chromatin of all known euechinoids are an extremely long average nucleosomal repeat length and the presence of two male germ-line-specific histone variants, Sp H1 and Sp H2B. Histone composition and nucleosomal repeat length of the sperm chromatin of Eucidaris were compared to those of several euechinoids and a starfish. Eucidaris sperm chromatin contained large H1 and H2B histone variants typical of euechinoids. The H1 was about nine amino acids smaller than Sp H1 of the advanced urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. Its Sp H2B molecules were the same size as in the euechinoids. Peptide maps showed that N-terminal regions of Sp H1 and Sp H2B contained repeating basic amino acid motifs characteristic of euechinoids. The smaller size of Eucidaris H1 is accounted for by a smaller C-terminal region. The repeat length of Eucidaris sperm chromatin was slightly shorter than that of two euechinoids, but significantly larger than starfish, which lacks a large H2B. The Sp H2B gene of Eucidaris was expressed during spermatogenesis in the same cell types as for S. purpuratus. Thus Sp histone subtype expression and chromatin structure in this distantly related echinoid closely resemble the euechinoids. The presence of an Sp H2B and a very long repeat length appear to be characteristic of the echinoids only.  相似文献   

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