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1.
The movements during fertilization have been investigated with differential interference optics and recorded by time-lapse video microscopy of the clear egg of the sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus. Sperm-egg binding occurs rapidly, and following a time when the sperm gyrates on the egg surface, gamete fusion occurs. A rapid cortical contraction radiates from the fusion site and is succeeded by the elevation of the fertilization coat. Sperm incorporation occurs in two stages: the fertilization cone enlarges around and above the erect and immotile sperm and then the sperm head, midpiece, and tail are displaced along the subsurface region of the egg at an average rate of 3.5 μm/min. The formation of the sperm aster moves the male pronucleus from the subsurface region of the egg toward the egg center at a rate of 4.9 μm/min. When the rays of the radial sperm aster appear to contact the female pronucleus, the female pronucleus migrates at a rate of 14.6 μm/min to the center of the sperm aster. The now adjacent pronuclei are moved to the egg center by the continuing enlargement of the sperm aster at a rate of 2.6 μm/min. Syngamy is usually preceded by the disassembly of the sperm aster. The centripetal migration of the pronuclei appears involved in the establishment of the first embryonic axis; cleavage occurs within 8° of the direction of this centering motion.  相似文献   

2.
Microtubule and centrosome distribution during sheep fertilization   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The distribution of microtubules and centrosomes was studied during sheep fertilization by electron and immunofluorescence microscopy. Tubulin and centrosomal material was identified with monoclonal anti-alpha-tubulin and MPM-2 antibodies, respectively. In ovulated eggs, microtubules were exclusively found in the meiotic spindle and centrosomal material at each of its poles. At fertilization, sperm centrosomes were incorporated into the egg and organized the sperm astral microtubules. During pronuclear development and migration, the sperm aster increased in size; microtubules of the sperm aster extended from the male pronucleus to the egg center and towards the female pronucleus. The position of the sperm aster during pronuclear migration suggests that it plays a role in this process. When the pronuclei were in apposition in the egg center, a dense array of microtubules and the centrosomal material were present between the two pronuclei. The proximal centriole of the sperm was identified by electron microscopy, between the apposed pronuclei. The centrosomal material extending around the centriole and the sperm neck and proximal mid-piece, apparently contained several foci from which microtubules radiated. These data suggest that in sheep unlike in mice, centrosomal material originating from the sperm is involved in the fertilization events.  相似文献   

3.
Microinjected Polystyrene Beads Move Along Astral Rays in Sand Dollar Eggs   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Movements of polystyrene beads along astral rays of the sperm aster and the mitotic aster were investigated in eggs of the sand dollars, Clypeaster japonicus and Scaphechinus mirabilis . Polystyrene beads injected into the unfertilized egg were at a standstill in the protoplasm. After fertilization, these beads exhibited movements toward the center of the sperm aster along the rays, and finally gathered around the astral center. They were distributed in blastomeres together with the mitotic centers during successive cleavages. When injected into eggs during mitosis, beads moved to the centers of the mitotic asters along astral rays. The injected beads did not move when the aster was disorganized by treatment with Colcemid, and moved when it formed after UV-irradiation. These results indicate that microtubules of astral rays are essential to the movement of polystyrene beads. The movement of small polystyrene beads (0.2–0.3 μm in diameter) resembled the saltatory movement of endogenous cytoplasmic granules, and the movement of large beads (ca. 1 μm in diameter) resembled the female pronuclear migration. All of these movements observed in fertilized eggs were demonstrated to be microtubule-dependent, perhaps sharing the same basic mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Anti-tubulin immunofluorescence microscopy is used here to demonstrate the configurations of the microtubule-containing structures which participate in the pronuclear movements of sea urchin fertilization. This technique shows that the egg is devoid of microtubules until after the fertilizing sperm is fully incorporated. All the microtubules which appear during the course of fertilization are organized around the base of the sperm head and the sperm aster thus formed behaves in a way that could account for the characteristic motions of the male and female pronuclei as documented by time-lapse video microscopy. Extension of astral microtubules appears to be responsible for the slow (ca. 2.5 μm min?1) movement of the sperm aster into the cytoplasm of the egg; the rapid (ca. 15 μm min?1) migration of the female pronucleus to the sperm aster seems to depend on connection of the female pronucleus to microtubules of the sperm aster. Continued extension of astral microtubules after the pronuclei are brought into conjunction can account for the centripetal motion of the paired (or fused) pronuclei and for the positioning of the zygote nucleus in the center of the egg. The behavior of astral microtubules during these motions suggests that they are capable of transmitting both pushing and pulling forces. All the pronuclear movements, and the assembly of detectable microtubules, are sensitive to the microtubule inhibitors griseofulvin and colchicine. Because of this sensitivity, and since all the observable microtubules within the egg during fertilization arise at the sperm aster, it is concluded that the pronuclear movements of fertilization result from the actions of the sperm aster. The pronuclear movements of sea urchin fertilization represent a simple but striking example of microtubule-mediated motility.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution of microtubules was studied during fertilization of the rabbit oocyte by immunofluorescence microscopy after staining with an anti-alpha-tubulin antibody. In ovulated oocytes, microtubules were found exclusively in the meiotic spindle. At fertilization, the paternal centrosome generated sperm astral microtubules. During pronuclear development, the sperm aster increased in size, and microtubules extended from the male pronucleus to the egg center and towards the female pronucleus. These observations indicate that microtubules emanating from the sperm centrosome were involved in the movements leading to the union of the male and female pronuclei. At late pronuclear stage, microtubules surrounded the adjacent pronuclei. The mitotic spindle that emerged from the perinuclear microtubules contained broad anastral poles.  相似文献   

6.
Microtubule organization and chromatin configurations in rabbit eggs after in vivo rabbit fertilization and after intracytoplasmic injection with human sperm were characterized. In unfertilized eggs, an anastral barrel-shaped meiotic spindle, oriented radially to the cortex, was observed. After rabbit sperm incorporation, microtubules were organized into a radial aster from the sperm head, and cytoplasmic microtubules were organized around the male and female pronuclei. The microtubules extending from the decondensed sperm head participated in pronuclear migration, and organization around the female pronucleus may also be important for pronuclear centration. Support for these observations was found in parthenogenetically activated eggs, in which microtubule arrays were organized around the single female pronucleus that formed after artificial activation. These observations support a biparental centrosomal contribution during rabbit fertilization as opposed to a strictly paternal inheritance pattern suggested from previous studies. In rabbit eggs that received injected human donor sperm, an astral array of microtubules radiated from the sperm neck and enlarged as the sperm head underwent pronuclear decondensation. gamma-Tubulin was observed in the center of the sperm aster. We conclude that the rabbit egg exhibits a blended centrosomal contribution necessary for completion of fertilization and that the rabbit egg may be a novel animal model for assessing centrosomal function in human sperm and spermatogenic cells following intracytoplasmic injection.  相似文献   

7.
Two microtubule-containing structures are implicated in dorsoventral polarization of the frog egg, and we examined the relationship between them. The sperm aster provides a directional cue for a cortical rotation specifying polarity, and a vegetal cortical array of parallel microtubules is likely part of the rotational machinery. The growing aster has an accumulation of microtubules marking the path of the sperm pronucleus, and its microtubules extend into the egg cortex as well as the cytoplasm. To test whether the vegetal parallel array was an extension of astral cortical growth, fertilized or activated eggs were bisected into animal and vegetal fragments. The vegetal fragments formed parallel arrays, even when isolated within a few minutes of egg activation. Neither the sperm centrosome nor another microtubule organizing center in the animal half of the egg is required for formation of the parallel array, but some animal half activity is involved in its disappearance. Correspondence to: R.P. Elinson  相似文献   

8.
A male pronucleus migrates toward the center of an egg to reach the female pronucleus for zygote formation. This migration depends on microtubules growing from two centrosomes associated with the male pronucleus. Two mechanisms were previously proposed for this migration: a "pushing mechanism," which uses the pushing force resulting from microtubule polymerization, and a "pulling mechanism," which uses the length-dependent pulling force generated by minus-end-directed motors anchored throughout the cytoplasm. We combined two computer-assisted analyses to examine the relative contribution of these mechanisms to male pronuclear migration. Computer simulation revealed an intrinsic difference in migration behavior of the male pronucleus between the pushing and pulling mechanisms. In vivo measurements using image processing showed that the actual migration behavior in Caenorhabditis elegans confirms the pulling mechanism. A male pronucleus having a single centrosome migrated toward the single aster. We propose that the pulling mechanism is the primary mechanism for male pronuclear migration.  相似文献   

9.
Microtubules in ascidian eggs during meiosis, fertilization, and mitosis   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The sequential changes in the distribution of microtubules during germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD), fertilization, and mitosis were investigated with antitubulin indirect immunofluorescence microscopy in several species of ascidian eggs (Molgula occidentalis, Ciona savignyi, and Halocynthia roretzi). These alterations in microtubule patterns were also correlated with observed cytoplasmic movements. A cytoplasmic latticework of microtubules was observed throughout meiosis. The unfertilized egg of M. occidentalis had a small meiotic spindle with wide poles; the poles became focused after egg activation. The other two species had more typical meiotic spindles before fertilization. At fertilization, a sperm aster first appeared near the cortex close to the vegetal pole. It enlarged into an unusual asymmetric aster associated with the egg cortex. The sperm aster rapidly grew after the formation of the second polar body, and it was displaced as far as the equatorial region, corresponding to the site of the myoplasmic crescent, the posterior half of the egg. The female pronucleus migrated to the male pronucleus at the center of the sperm aster. The microtubule latticework and the sperm aster disappeared towards the end of first interphase with only a small bipolar structure remaining until first mitosis. At mitosis the asters enlarged tremendously, while the mitotic spindle remained remarkably small. The two daughter nuclei remained near the site of cleavage even after division was complete. These results document the changes in microtubule patterns during maturation in Ascidian oocytes, demonstrate that the sperm contributes the active centrosome at fertilization, and reveal the presence of a mitotic apparatus at first division which has an unusually small spindle and huge asters.  相似文献   

10.
The observations of the fertilization process in the heart-urchin, Clypeaster japonicus with a differential interference microscope indicate that the sperm pronucleus is carried to the center of the egg by the growth of the sperm aster as stated by Chambers (5), and that the egg pronucleus is carried to the center of the aster by a filamentous structure formed between them. The curved path of egg pronucleus in the fertilized egg is interpreted as the combination of the movement of the center of the aster and the movement of the egg pronucleus toward the center of the aster. The movement and the rotation of the sperm head result from pushing by the tail being engulfed in the egg.  相似文献   

11.
Following fertilization, the Xenopus egg cortex rotates relative to the cytoplasm by 30 degrees about a horizontal axis. The direction of rotation, and as a result the orientation of the embryonic body axes, is normally specified by the position of sperm entry. The mechanism of rotation appears to involve an array of aligned microtubules in the vegetal cortex (Elinson and Rowning, 1988, Devl Biol. 128, 185-197). We performed anti-tubulin immunofluorescence on sections to follow the formation of this array. Microtubules disappear rapidly from the egg following fertilization, and reappear first in the sperm aster. Surprisingly, astral microtubules then extend radially through both the animal and vegetal cytoplasm. The cortical array arises as they reach the vegetal cell surface. The eccentric position of the sperm aster gives asymmetry to the formation of the array and may explain its alignment since microtubules reaching the cortex tend to bend away from the sperm entry side. The radial polymerization of cytoplasmic microtubules is not dependent on the sperm aster or on the female pronucleus: similar but more symmetric patterns arise in artificially activated and enucleate eggs, slightly later than in fertilized eggs. These observations suggest that the cortical microtubule array forms as a result of asymmetric microtubule growth outward from cytoplasm to cortex and, since cortical and cytoplasmic microtubules remain connected throughout the period of the rotation, that the microtubules of the array rotate with the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

12.
The present study examined the role of the cytoskeleton in sperm entry and migration through the egg cytoplasm during fertilization in the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha (Bivalvia: Veneroida: Dreissenidae). Fertilization in this freshwater bivalve occurs outside the mantle cavity, permitting detailed observations of fertilization. After its initial binding to the egg surface, the sperm is incorporated in two stages: (1) a gradual incorporation of the sperm nucleus into the egg cortex, followed by (2) a more rapid incorporation of the sperm axoneme, and translocation of the sperm head through the egg cytoplasm. Initial incorporation into the egg cortex was shown to be microfilament dependent. Microfilaments were found in the sperm's preformed acrosomal filament, the microvilli on the egg surface, and in an actin-filled insemination cone surrounding the incorporating sperm. Treatment of eggs with cytochalasin B inhibited sperm entry in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Microtubule polymerization was not necessary for initial sperm entry. Following incorporation of the sperm head, the flagellar axoneme entered the egg cytoplasm and remained active for several minutes. Associated with the incorporated axoneme was a flow of cytoplasmic particles originating near the proximal end of the flagella. Inhibition of microtubule polymerization prevented entry of the sperm axoneme, and the subsequent cytoplasmic current was not observed. After sperm incorporation into the egg cortex, no appreciable microfilaments were associated with the sperm nucleus. A diminutive sperm aster was associated with the sperm nucleus during its decondensation, but no obvious extension toward the female pronucleus was observed. The sperm aster was significantly smaller than the spindle associated with the female pronucleus, suggesting a reduced role for the sperm aster in amphimixis.  相似文献   

13.
Tram U  Sullivan W 《Current biology : CB》2000,10(22):1413-1419
Background: In the majority of animals, the centrosome-the microtubule-organizing center of the cell-is assembled from components of both the sperm and the egg. How the males of the insect order Hymenoptera acquire centrosomes is a mystery, as they originate from virgin birth.Results: To address this issue, we observed centrosome, spindle and nuclear behavior in real time during early development in the parthenogenetic hymenopteran Nasonia vitripennis. Female meiosis was identical in unfertilized eggs. Centrosomes were assembled before the first mitotic division but were inherited differently in unfertilized and fertilized eggs. In both, large numbers of asters appeared at the cortex of the egg after completion of meiosis. In unfertilized eggs, the asters migrated inwards and two of them became stably associated with the female pronucleus and the remaining cytoplasmic asters rapidly disappeared. In fertilized eggs, the Nasonia sperm brought in paternally derived centrosomes, similar to Drosophila melanogaster. At pronuclear fusion, the diploid zygotic nucleus was associated only with paternally derived centrosomes. None of the cytoplasmic asters associated with the zygotic nucleus and, as in unfertilized eggs, they rapidly degenerated.Conclusions: Selection and migration of the female pronucleus is independent of the sperm and its aster. Unfertilized male eggs inherit maternal centrosomes whereas fertilized female eggs inherit paternal centrosomes. This is the first system described in which centrosomes are reciprocally inherited. The results suggest the existence of a previously undescribed mechanism for regulating centrosome number in the early embryo.  相似文献   

14.
In the fertilization of sea urchin eggs, intracellular [Ca2+] (Cai) increases transiently and intracellular pH (pHi) elevates accordingly. Unlinking these two activating factors experimentally, the requirement of the increase in pHi for sperm aster formation in the sea urchin, Clypeaster japonicus, was investigated. When the eggs were injected with an EGTA or BAPTA solution, they incorporated sperm but did not organize the sperm aster. Using these sperm-incorporated eggs under the condition that an increase in Cai was blocked, pHi was regulated by two methods: (i) perfusing ammonium acetate-containing seawater; and (ii) injecting pH buffer solutions of various pH values. By either of the two methods, the sperm aster formed at pHi 7.0 or more and functioned in female pronuclear migration when the sperm aster reached the female pronucleus. Hence, the step of the transient increase in Cai at fertilization can be bypassed. In contrast, a pHi increase is indispensably required for sperm aster formation in sea urchin eggs. Moreover, under the condition that there was the transient increase in Cai, the threshold pHi value for sperm aster formation was pHi 7.0 or more. Consequently, whether a Cai increase on fertilization occurs or not, the threshold pHi value for sperm aster formation is constant in sea urchin eggs.  相似文献   

15.
In order to understand when the orientation of the first cleavage plane is fixed along the animal-vegetal axis in starfish eggs, the behavior of the sperm aster was examined by indirect immunofluorescence staining. After duplication, the sperm aster organizes the mitotic apparatus for first cleavage perpendicular to the cleavage plane. The sperm aster located in the egg periphery just after fertilization and moved to the site close to the animal pole rather than the egg center by meiosis II. At early metaphase II, duplication of the sperm aster was detected but the axis of the resultant sperm diaster randomly pointed. Subsequently, its axis had already turned perpendicular to the animal-vegetal axis before pronucleus fusion. These results indicate that the orientation processes of the sperm diaster consist of positioning before its duplication and successive determining its azimuth. Furthermore, the azimuth and position of the mitotic apparatus for first cleavage did not change by shifting or eliminating the meiotic division-related structures such as the germinal vesicle, meiotic spindle, and female pronucleus by micromanipulation. These results show that none of them determines the first cleavage plane. Therefore, we discuss the pointing mechanism of the first cleavage plane without the influence of these meiotic division-related structures.  相似文献   

16.
Insemination of sea urchin (Arbacia) ova with mussel (Mytilus) sperm has been accomplished by treating eggs with trypsin and suspending the gametes in seawater made alkaline with NaOH. Not all inseminated eggs undergo a cortical granule reaction. Some eggs either elevate what remains of their vitelline layer or demonstrate no cortical modification whatsoever. After its incorporation into the egg, the nucleus of Mytilus sperm undergoes changes which eventually give rise to the formation of a male pronucleus. Concomitant with these transformations, a sperm aster may develop in association with the centrioles brought into the egg with the spermatozoon. Both the male pronucleus and the sperm aster may then migrate centrad to the female pronucleus. Evidence is presented which suggests that fusion of the male pronuclei from Mytilus sperm with female pronuclei from Arbacia eggs may occur, although this was not directly observed. These results demonstrate that Mytilus sperm nuclei are able to react to conditions within Arbacia eggs and differentiate into male pronuclei.  相似文献   

17.
Hydrozoan eggs are normally fertilized at the site of polar body formation. The female pronucleus is just under the cell membrane at this site. Sperm are attracted to the eggs and aggregate at this site. This paper demonstrates that this site is the only region on the egg surface where the sperm can fuse with the egg. This has been done by cutting unfertilized eggs into fragments containing the site of polar body formation and fragments without this region. Sperm were added to the fragments and their ability to be fertilized was assayed by noting whether or not they cleaved. Only fragments containing the site of polar body formation cleaved. The absence of cleavage in fragments lacking the site of polar body formation cannot be attributed to the inability of these fragments to attract sperm. Such fragments attract sperm for several hours while fragments which contain the site of polar body formation stop attracting sperm a few minutes after fertilization. Cytological studies of egg fragments which do not contain the site of polar body formation show that they do not contain sperm nuclei. The lack of cleavage in these fragments cannot be attributed to the lack of a female pronucleus. By using centrifugation it is possible to move the female pronucleus away from the site of polar body formation. By cutting these centrifuged eggs in an appropriate way it is possible to create egg fragments with the site of polar body formation that lack the female pronucleus and egg fragments that lack the site of polar body formation but contain a female pronucleus. Only fragments which contain the site of polar body formation can be fertilized.  相似文献   

18.
In Mytilidae, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in the offspring is inherited from male and female parents. Sperm mitochondria are only incorporated into the testes. This phenomenon is called doubly uniparental inheritance (DUI). Sperm mitochondria should locate in the primordial germ cell during development to maintain DUI. However, the mechanism of sperm mitochondria localization is still unknown. To reveal the mechanism, we followed the location of sperm mitochondria in Mytilus galloprovincialis zygotes fertilized with sperm stained by MitoTracker. Just after fertilization, sperm mitochondria, which were found to enter eggs from various sites, remained at sperm entry point. Five sperm mitochondria located at the male pronucleus. After pronuclear expansion, sperm mitochondria migrated to the center of the egg together with the male pronucleus. At anaphase of cleavage-I, the distribution pattern of sperm mitochondria was divided into two patterns. In pattern A, sperm mitochondria located in the equatorial region of the eggs. In pattern B, sperm mitochondria migrated and divided into two groups with chromosomes. From observations of colchicine-treated eggs, we suggest that sperm mitochondria migration from fertilization to anaphase of cleavage-I depends on the microtubules. The difference between pattern A and pattern B may be caused by whether sperm mitochondria migrated or not by the microtubules at cleavage-I.  相似文献   

19.
Fertilization events following coalescence of the gamete plasma membranes and culminating in the formation of the zygote nucleus were investigated by light and electron microscopy in the sea urchin, Arbacia punctulata. Shortly after the spermatozoon passes through the fertilization cone, it rotates approximately 180° and comes to rest lateral to its point of entrance. Concomitantly, the nonperforated nuclear envelope of the sperm nucleus undergoes degeneration followed by dispersal of the sperm chromatin and development of the pronuclear envelope. During this reorganization of the sperm nucleus, the sperm aster is formed. The latter is composed of ooplasmic lamellar structures and fasciles of microtubules. The male pronucleus, sperm mitochondrion, and flagellum accompany the sperm aster during its migration. As the pronuclei encounter one another, the surface of the female pronucleus proximal to the advancing male pronucleus becomes highly convoluted. Subsequently, the formation of the zygote nucleus commences with the fusion of the outer and the inner membranes of the pronuclear envelopes, thereby producing a small internuclear bridge and one continuous, perforated zygote nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

20.
大熊猫与金黄地鼠体外异种受精的研究   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0  
陈大元  何光昕 《动物学报》1989,35(4):376-380
在大熊猫精子与地鼠卵的体外异种受精中,发现大熊猫精子穿入地鼠卵后可以激活受精卵产生极区,释放第二极体,受精卵内雌性原核形成。与此同时,地鼠卵的胞质也能促使大熊猫精子头发育成雄性原核,异种精卵间的相互作用与同种受精的相似。 细胞松弛素B能阻抑大熊猫雄性原核从地鼠卵皮层迁移到卵的中央,实验表明大熊猫雄性原核的迁移也受异种卵的微丝的控制。  相似文献   

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