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1.
N-Acetylglucosaminidase (GlcNAc'ase), which possesses by far the highest activity of all Phallusia mammillata sperm glycosidases, was isolated and purified using DEAE-cellulose, phenyl-Sepharose, and concanavalin A affinity chromatography. The molecular size of the native enzyme estimated by G-200 gel permeation was 158 kDa. On SDS-PAGE, the denatured enzyme migrated as a single band with a Mr of 78 kDa. This indicates that under nondenaturing conditions the GlcNAc'ase prevails as a dimer. The molecular activity of the enzyme was determined to be 3.7 x 10(5) U/mumole, the Km for p-NP-GlcNAc was 0.65 mM, and the Ki for GlcNAc was 5.5 mM. It has been suggested that gamete binding in ascidians might be mediated by an enzyme-substrate complex established between a sperm glycosidase and corresponding glycosides on the vitelline coat. Thus, the GlcNAc'ase should be present as an exoenzyme at the proper place on the sperm surface membrane, i.e., on the sperm tip and possibly over the mitochondrial region. We localized the enzyme with fluorescence and electron microscopy using the neoglycoprotein BSA-p-aminophenyl-N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminide (BSA-GlcNAc) or concanavalin A coupled either to fluorochromes or gold particles. Labeling of unreacted and activated sperm revealed three distinct binding sites, namely at the sperm tip, over the mitochondrion, and at the head-tail junction. In reacted sperm strong labeling was observed over the translocated mitochondrion as well as at the sperm tip. An intensive binding was observed along the rim which borders the cap-like structure at the sperm tip. The distribution of the enzyme reflected by these binding patterns accounts well for the suggested function. Using N-acetylglucosaminono-1,5-lactone oxime, a novel, highly specific inhibitor of GlcNAc'ase, we were able to show that this enzyme is indispensable for fertilization of intact eggs, but not of eggs deprived of their vitelline coat. These observations are discussed in terms of functional relationships which may exist between this enzyme, sperm binding, gamete recognition, and penetration of the vitelline coat.  相似文献   

2.
Sperm proteasomes are thought to be involved in sperm binding to and in sperm penetration through the vitelline coat of the eggs of the stolidobranch ascidian Halocynthia roretzi. However, it is not known whether they are involved in the fertilization of eggs of other ascidians. Therefore, we investigated whether sperm proteasomes are also involved in the fertilization of the eggs of the primitive phlebobranch ascidian Ciona intestinalis. Fertilization of the eggs of C. intestinalis was potently inhibited by the proteasome inhibitors MG115 and MG132 but not by the cysteine protease inhibitor E-64-d. On the other hand, neither fertilization of the vitelline coat-free eggs nor sperm binding to the vitelline coat was inhibited by the two proteasome inhibitors at a concentration sufficient to inhibit fertilization of intact eggs. These results indicate that the proteasome plays an essential role in sperm penetration through the vitelline coat rather than in sperm binding to the coat or in sperm-egg membrane fusion. The proteasome activity, which was detected in the sperm extract using Suc-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-MCA as a substrate, was strongly inhibited by both MG115 and MG132, and was weakly inhibited by chymostatin, whereas neither leupeptin nor E-64-d inhibited the activity. The molecular mass of the enzyme was estimated to be 600-kDa by Superose 12 gel filtration, and the activity in sperm extract was immunoprecipitated with an anti-proteasome antibody. These results indicate that the proteasome present in sperm of C. intestinalis is involved in fertilization, especially in the process of sperm penetration through the vitelline coat, probably functioning as a lysin. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 50:493–498, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
To ensure normal development, most animals have evolved a number of mechanisms to block polyspermy including prevention of binding to surface coats as well as sperm-egg fusion. Ascidian sperm bind to vitelline coat (VC) glycosides. In the genus Ascidia, N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) is the ligand to which sperm bind. The number of sperm bound to the VC is biphasic following fertilization; sperm binding increases through the first minute or so, then abruptly declines. At fertilization, the eggs of Ascidia callosa, A. ceratodes, A. mentula, A. nigra and Phallusia mammillata release N-acetylglucosaminidase into the sea water (SW). This has been shown to inactivate VC GlcNAc groups, blocking the binding of supernumerary sperm and polyspermy in A. nigra. This block to polyspermy is inactivated by GlcNAc (2mM) or 150 mM-Na+ (choline substituted) SW. These treatments are not additive and therefore probably affect the same process. In A. callosa, fertilization in low Na+ SW causes a 60% decline in enzyme release and a similar increase in the number of sperm remaining on the VC at 4 min as well as a great increase in polyspermy. Thus the principal block to polyspermy in ascidian eggs involves the release of N-acetylglucosaminidase which appears to be Na+ dependent. Enzyme activity is found in the supernatant SW by 15 s after fertilization, suggesting that it is stored very near the egg surface. Histochemical staining of whole eggs and embryos shows loss of surface-associated enzyme activity following fertilization. Like other lysosomal enzymes this N-acetylglucosaminidase is mannosylated and has an acidic pH optimum.  相似文献   

4.
In the initial stage of ascidian fertilization sequential sperm–egg coat interactions assure successful species-specific fertilization. Sperm recognize, bind to, and then penetrate the egg investment that consists of follicle cells (FC) and an acellular vitelline coat (VC). To identify plasma proteins that recognize the egg coat, a membrane fraction was prepared from Phallusia mammillata sperm using nitrogen cavitation followed by three centrifugation steps. The purity of the membrane fractions was assessed by transmission electron microscopy and marker enzymes. Comparison of the electrophoretic pattern of sperm extracellular membrane domains labeled by radio-iodination or biotinylation and recorded by autoradiography or enhanced chemiluminescence, respectively, showed the non-radioactive procedure to be a convenient and efficient method. Isolated sperm membrane components were found to inhibit fertilization in a concentration-dependent manner and to bind mainly to the FC. Eggs were used as an affinity matrix to determine which of the solubilized sperm membrane proteins possess egg-binding activity. Three biotinylated proteins (66kDa, 120kDa and 140kDa) were found to bind to the VC. Assays probing heterospecific binding to Ascidia mentula eggs revealed that the 120kDa protein possesses species-specific binding activity. Thus, the current data suggest the 120 kDa sperm membrane protein as a candidate adhesion molecule with a possible role in gamete binding and species-specific recognition in P. mammillata .  相似文献   

5.
The acrosome in the sperm of the toad, Bufo bufo japonicus, consists of a membrane-limited acrosomal cap and a fibrous perforatorium. When sperm are incubated with the oviducal pars recta extract (PRE) for 30–60 min, the outer acrosomal membrane fuses with the overlying plasma membrane at several points with concomitant loss of the contents of the acrosomal cap. The inner acrosomal membrane thus exposed fuses with the plasma membrane at the caudal end of the acrosomal region. This PRE-induced acrosome reaction is completely inhibited by soybean trypsin inhibitor. Sperm found in the innermost jelly layer of inseminated eggs possess an intact acrosome, but those either passing through the vitelline coat or localizing in the perivitelline space are acrosome-reacted in the same manner as when treated with PRE. These observations, combined with recent evidence showing involvement of the pars recta substance in fertilization, indicate that the acrosome reaction occurring in a fertilizing sperm at or near the surface of the vitelline coat is a response to a substance that is derived from the pars recta and deposited in the vitelline coat.  相似文献   

6.
In this report, unpublished and recent findings concerning the structure and function of the ascidian egg coat are compiled in context with fertilization. In the initial stage of ascidian fertilization, sperm interact with a complex egg investment that consists of a layer of follicle cells attached to an acellular vitelline coat. Increasing evidence exists that ascidian sperm are activated at their encounter with the follicle cells. The molecular basis of sperm-follicle cell interactions is discussed in context with sperm binding, membrane proteins and sperm bound glycosidase. The model that suggests a block to polyspermy established by glycosidase released from the follicle cells on fertilization is evaluated and compared with assured facts. Although a number of questions remain to be answered, our recent findings that a cloned beta-hexosaminidase from P. mammillata binds exclusively to the follicle cells of unfertilized but not fertilized eggs, indicates that the follicle cells participate in the block to polyspermy. A dual function, mediating sperm activation and a block to polyspermy attributes to the ascidian follicle cells a key position in fertilization.  相似文献   

7.
Ascidian eggs are surrounded by a noncellular layer and two cellular layers, which are penetrated by sperm. Three sperm surface proteases are essential for fertilization of eggs from the stolidobranch ascidian Halocynthia: spermosin, acrosin, and the proteasome. In the phlebobranch Ciona, a chymotrypsin-like protease and the proteasome are essential in fertilization. Sperm from the phlebobranch ascidians Phallusia mammillata, Ascidia (=Phallusia) nigra, and Ascidia columbiana, all express spermosin, acrosin, and the proteasomal chymotrypsin activities on their surfaces. Chymostatin blocks cleavage in phlebobranchs, but inhibitors of spermosin and acrosin only delay it by several minutes. Protease inhibitors have little effect upon sperm binding in Phallusia but strongly affect the rate of sperm passage through the vitelline coat. Peptide substrates and inhibitors to spermosin and acrosin cause a significant decline in the number of eggs undergoing pre-meiotic contractions at 3 min after fertilization. Thus while chymotrypsin activity is essential for penetration of the vitelline coat, spermosin and acrosin both function to increase the rate of fertilization. A crucial step in the divergence of the phlebobranchs and stolidobranchs may have been the conversion of spermosin and acrosin to essential proteases in the stolidobranchs, or, perhaps, their essential function was lost in the evolution of phlebobranchs. Aplousobranch ascidians are all colonial with very small zooids. Sperm from Aplidium californicum, Aplidium solidum (Polyclinidae), and Distaplia occidentalis (Holozoidae) have acrosin and chymotrypsin activities but lack spermosin activity. This enzyme is also missing from sperm of colonial phlebobranch and stolidobranch ascidians, suggesting that spermosin is not necessary for small zooids with internal fertilization.  相似文献   

8.
In this paper we show that in the ascidia Ciona intestinalis extracellular Ca2+ is required for the binding of the spermatozoa to the vitelline coat (VC) glycerol-treated eggs and for fertilization to occur. Divalent cations, Mg2+ and Mn2+, cannot replace Ca2+. Once bound, the spermatozoa cannot be detached from the vitelline coat by adding of EGTA. Verapamil does not interfere with the binding of spermatozoa to the vitelline coat, whereas it blocks the Ca2+ ionophore A23187-induced sperm activation and acrosome reaction. Fertilization too was inhibited by the presence of this drug.  相似文献   

9.
It has been recently shown that, in several genera of annelids, including Chaetopterus, fertilizing sperm attach to and fuse with egg microvilli which penetrate the vitelline envelope. This suggests that the annelid vitelline envelope may have no direct or obligatory role in normal fertilization. The present study was undertaken to investigate the involvement of the vitelline envelope in fertilization in Chaetopterus experimentally, by examining the fertilization of vitelline envelope-free eggs quantitatively and qualitatively. Brief exposure of the eggs to isotonic sucrose-EDTA removed the vitelline envelope as determined by both phase-contrast and electron microscopy, rendered the eggs more sensitive to polyspermy and substantially reduced the binding of supernumerary sperm to eggs but did not decrease fertilizability as determined by sperm dilution assay and did not make the eggs more sensitive to cross-fertilization. The events of fertilization were examined by electron microscopy and found to be very similar in vitelline envelope-free eggs to those in intact eggs. We conclude that the vitelline envelope in Chaetopterus has binding sites for sperm but that it has no obligatory role in fertilization and is primarily involved in the prevention of polyspermy.  相似文献   

10.
The sonicated supernatant of the sperm of the toad, Bufo japonicus, can digest easily the vitelline coat (VC) of uterine eggs, and to a lesser extent the VC of coelomic eggs, but not that of activated eggs. The VC lysis and fertilization were competitively inhibited in the presence of t-butyloxycarbonyl-L-Gln-L-Arg-L-Arg-4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide (Boc-Gln-Arg-Arg-MCA), suggesting the involvement of proteases in the fertilization process. Starting from a sonicated supernatant, a potent VC lysin, possessing hydrolytic activity on Boc-Gln-Arg-Arg-MCA, was obtained by anion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The activity of the partially purified lysin was inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP) and by such trypsin inhibitors as soybean trypsin inhibitor, leupeptin, and (p-amidinophenyl) methanesulfonyl fluoride hydrochloride, but not by chymostatin, E-64, and ethylene glycol bis(β-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid. The molecular weight of the lysin was estimated to be 32K, based on the fluorographic image of 3H-DFP binding to the lysin on sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The VC lysin was most active at pH 7.0–7.6 and under low ionic strength equivalent to fresh water. The release of the VC lysin was induced upon incubation of sperm with the contents of oviducal pars recta granules (PRG), which are known to induce the acrosome reaction. We conclude that the protease studied here represents the VC lysin of toad sperm that is involved in fertilization by digesting the VC of uterine eggs, probably released as a result of the acrosome reaction induced by PRG.  相似文献   

11.
Ascidian sperm lysin system   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fertilization is a precisely controlled process involving many gamete molecules in sperm binding to and penetration through the extracellular matrix of the egg. After sperm bind to the extracellular matrix (vitelline coat), they undergo the acrosome reaction which exposes and partially releases a lytic agent called "lysin" to digest the vitelline coat for the sperm penetration. The vitelline coat sperm lysin is generally a protease in deuterostomes. The molecular mechanism of the actual degradation of the vitelline coat, however, remains poorly understood. In order to understand the lysin system, we have been studying the fertilization mechanism in ascidians (Urochordata) because we can obtain large quantities of gametes which are readily fertilized in the laboratory. Whereas ascidians are hermaphrodites, which release sperm and eggs simultaneously, many ascidians, including Halocynthia roretzi, are strictly self-sterile. Therefore, after sperm recognize the vitelline coat as nonself, the sperm lysin system is thought to be activated. We revealed that two sperm trypsin-like proteases, acrosin and spermosin, the latter of which is a novel sperm protease with thrombin-like substrate specificity, are essential for fertilization in H. roretzi. These molecules contain motifs involved in binding to the vitelline coat. We found that the proteasome rather than trypsin-like proteases has a direct lytic activity toward the vitelline coat. The target for the ascidian lysin was found to be a 70-kDa vitelline coat component called HrVC70, which is made up of 12 EGF-like repeats. In addition to the proteasome system, the ubiquitination system toward the HrVC70 was found to be necessary for ascidian fertilization. In this review, I describe recent progress on the structures and roles in fertilization of the two trypsin-like proteases, acrosin and spermosin, and also on the novel extracellular ubiquitin-proteasome system, which plays an essential role in the degradation of the ascidian vitelline coat.  相似文献   

12.
Studies were made on the involvement in sperm-egg interactions of follicle cells of Ciona intestinalis , which are tall, vacuolated cells attached to the outer surface of the egg vitelline coat. The basal surface of the follicle cells is polygonal. The borders between cells could easily be observed by the binding of fluorescent SBA (soy bean agglutinin), a lectin recognizing N-acetylgalactosamine (GaINAc) residues. At fertilization many spermatozoa aggregate along these polygonal borders of cells on the vitelline coat, through which they entered the perivitelline space. The removal of follicle cells was sometimes associated with loss of SBA-binding sites, and in such cases the sperm did not show a hexagonal pattern of aggregation, but became dispersed all over the vitelline coat. Removal of the follicle sometimes delayed fertilization. Examination of sections of gametes stained with DAPI, a fluorescent dye staining DNA, showed that removal of the follicle reduced the number of spermatozoa bound to the vitelline coat and, more especially, the number of spermatozoa penetrating through the vitelline coat. The blockage of GalNAc residues on the vitelline coat with SBA did not appreciably affect the time course of fertilization or the number of sperm associated with eggs. These findings are discussed in relation to the role of follicle cells in facilitating sperm aggregation on the vitelline coat and their penetration through it.  相似文献   

13.
Past studies have suggested that mouse sperm surface galactosyltransferase may participate during fertilization by binding N- acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) residues in the zona pellucida. In this paper, we examined further the role of sperm surface galactosyltransferase in mouse fertilization. Two reagents that specifically perturb sperm surface galactosyltransferase activity both inhibit sperm-zona binding. The presence of the milk protein alpha- lactalbumin specifically modifies the substrate specificity of sperm galactosyltransferase away from GlcNAc and towards glucose and simultaneously inhibits sperm binding to the zona pellucida. Similarly, UDP-dialdehyde inhibits sperm binding to the zona pellucida and sperm surface galactosyl-transferase activity to identical degrees. Of five other sperm enzymes assayed, four are unaffected by UDP-dialdehyde, and one is affected only slightly. Covalent linkage of UDP-dialdehyde to sperm dramatically inhibits binding to eggs, while treatment of eggs with UDP-dialdehyde has no effect on sperm binding. Heat-solubilized or pronase-digested zona pellucida inhibit sperm-zona binding, and they can be glycosylated by sperm with UDP-galactose. Sperm are also able to glycosylate intact zona pellucida with UDP-galactose. Thus, solubilized and intact zona pellucida act as substrates for sperm surface GlcNAc:galactosyltransferases. Finally, pretreatment of eggs with beta- N-acetylglucosaminidase inhibits sperm binding by up to 86%, while under identical conditions, pretreatment with beta-galactosidase increases sperm binding by 55%. These studies, in conjunction with those of the preceding paper dealing with surface galactosyltransferase changes during capacitation, directly suggest that galactosyltransferase is at least one of the components necessary for sperm binding to the zona pellucida.  相似文献   

14.
Ascidians (invertebrate chordates) are very abundant in many marine subtidal areas. They often live in dense multispecies clumps; thus, interspecific competition for space may be intense. Although most noncolonial species are broadcast spawners, their eggs can be fertilized only by sperm of the same species (1). Multiple fertilization is lethal and all animals have evolved blocks to polyspermy. Ascidian eggs block polyspermy by enzymatic (2) and electrical mechanisms (3). Sperm bind to N-acetylglucosamine groups on the vitelline coat (4, 5, 6, 7). Follice cells surrounding the vitelline coat release N-acetylglucosaminidase during egg activation (8), preventing the binding of all sperm but a few (2). I show here that this interaction is not species-specific; sperm from one species can cause glycosidase release from follicle cells of a second species. Furthermore, once glycosidase release has been induced, the subsequent addition of sperm from the egg-producing species fails to fertilize a substantial proportion of these eggs. This leads to the hypothesis that sperm from one species of ascidian can interfere with fertilization of a second species. While intraspecific sperm competition has been well documented in several taxa (9, 10), this is the first record of sperm competition between species, or interspecific sperm competition.  相似文献   

15.
In the self sterile ascidian, Ciona intestinalis , the spermatozoa rarely bind to the vitelline coat of autologous eggs and never penetrate it. We report here that concanavalin A (ConA), a lectin recognizing mannose or glucose residues of carbohydrates, can modify these self- and nonself-specific sperm-egg interactions. When eggs were pretreated with 0.1–0.5 mg/ml of ConA, about two thousand spermatozoa became attached to the autologous vitelline coat within five minutes of insemination. The effect of ConA was not modified by the addition of D-mannose or pretreatment of spermatozoa with ConA, showing that ConA does not function merely as a ligand bridging the sperm and vitelline coat. In contrast to the marked enhancement of sperm-egg binding, ConA did not facilitate the penetration of spermatozoa through the autologous vitelline coat. Even in non-autologous insemination, it blocked the sperm penetration and, consequently, fertilization did not occur, as shown by Rosati et al. (1978). D-Mannose, when mixed with ConA in advance, completely abolished this inhibitory effect of ConA. Lotus agglutinin, a fucose-binding lectin, was less effective and wheat germ agglutinin and soy bean agglutinin had no effect on sperm entry in the perivitelline space. The results of this study are discussed in relation to the possible involvement of mannosyl and/or glucosyl glycoconjugates in allo-specific sperm-egg interactions.  相似文献   

16.
Sperm binding to the vitelline envelope in dejellied Xenopus laevis eggs was effectively inhibited by inhibitors for trypsin (soybean trypsin inhibitor and p-toluenesulfonyl-L-lysine chloroethyl ketone) and aminopeptidase B (o-phenanthroline, bestatin, and arphamenine B). Likewise, synthetic 4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide (MCA) substrates (t-butoxycarbonyl-GlyArgArg-MCA, benzyloxycarbonyl-ArgArg-MCA, and Arg-MCA) inhibited binding. Consistently, when jellied eggs were inseminated in the presence of these substrates or inhibitors for proteases, fertilization was effectively blocked. The medium in which live sperm or the sperm membrane fraction were suspended exhibited hydrolyzing activities against the synthetic substrates mentioned above, and these activities were effectively inhibited by the protease inhibitors. Ultracentrifugal fractionation of the sperm suspension following induction of the acrosome reaction by a calcium ionophore, A23187, indicated that a considerable amount of the total tryptic and aminopeptidase B activity was released into the medium. On this occasion, part of the tryptic and aminopeptidase B activity was definitely estimated to be discharged in association with a vesiculated membrane, supporting the notion that the proteases involved in binding to the vitelline envelope are present on the sperm plasma membrane.  相似文献   

17.
Many ascidians live in clumps and usually release sperm before the eggs. Consequently, eggs are often spawned into dense clouds of sperm. Because fertilization by more than a single sperm is lethal, ascidians have evolved at least two successive blocks to polyspermy: the rapid release of a glycosidase that inhibits sperm binding to the vitelline coat (VC) and a subsequent change in membrane potential that prevents supernumerary sperm–egg fusion. This paper shows that (1) these two blocks can be uncoupled by the use of suramin, and (2) most of the glycosidase appears to be from the follicle cells, which are accessory cells on the outside of the egg VC. Phallusia mammillata eggs initially bind numerous sperm but, after the glycosidase is released, only a few additional sperm bind. Intact eggs in 20 μM suramin release glycosidase, but the electrical response is inhibited; sperm swim actively and bind to the VC but fail to penetrate. Suramin treatment is completely reversible; intact eggs exhibit the electrical response an average of 11 minutes after the drug is washed out. Sperm must contact the follicle cells before passing through the VC; eggs with the VC removed and fertilized in the presence of 20 μM suramin show the electrical response 35% of the time, thus VC removal enhances sperm entry. Like the intact eggs, 100% of the naked eggs respond electrically to fertilization after the drug is washed out. Follicle cells that are isolated by calcium magnesium free seawater and then returned to complete seawater release N-acetylglucosaminidase activity in response to sperm. Thus, these eggs have two blocks to polyspermy that operate in sequence: an early first block resulting from enzymatic modification of the VC by N-acetylglucosaminidase released primarily from follicle cells and a second electrical block operating at the egg plasma membrane level and requiring sperm–egg fusion. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 48:137-143, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Abalone eggs are surrounded by a complex extracellular coat that contains three distinct elements: the jelly layer, the vitelline envelope, and the egg surface coat. In this study we used light and electron microscopy to describe these three elements in the red abalone (Haliotis rufescens) and ascribe function to each based on their interactions with sperm. The jelly coat is a spongy matrix that lies at the outermost margin of the egg and consists of variably sized fibers. Sperm pass through this layer with their acrosomes intact and then go on to bind to the vitelline envelope. The vitelline envelope is a multilamellar fibrous layer that appears to trigger the acrosome reaction after sperm binding. Next, sperm release lysin from their acrosomal granules, a nonenzymatic protein that dissolves a hole in the vitelline envelope through which the sperm swims. Sperm then contact the egg surface coat, a network of uniformly sized filaments lying directly above the egg plasma membrane. This layer mediates attachment of sperm, via their acrosomal process, to the egg surface. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
Beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, which is found almost ubiquitously in sperm of invertebrates and vertebrates, supposedly mediates a carbohydrate-based transient sperm-egg coat binding. In ascidians and mammals, beta-hexosaminidase released at fertilization from eggs has been proposed to modify sperm receptor glycoproteins of the egg envelope, thus setting up a block to polyspermy. Previously, it was shown that in potential sperm receptor glycoproteins of the ascidian Phallusia mammillata, N-acetylglucosamine is the prevailing glycoside residue and that the egg harbors three active molecular forms of beta-hexosaminidase. In the present study, P. mammillata beta-hexosaminidase cDNA was isolated from an ovarian cDNA library and characterized. The deduced amino acid sequence showed a high similarity with other known beta-hexosaminidases; however, P. mammillata beta-hexosaminidase had a unique potential N-glycosylation site. A phylogenetic analysis suggested that P. mammillata beta-hexosaminidase developed independently after having branched off from the common ancestor gene of the chordate enzyme before two isoforms of the mammalian enzyme appeared. In situ hybridization revealed stage-specific expression of beta-hexosaminidase mRNA during oogenesis in the oocyte and in the accessory test and follicle cells. This suggests that the three egg beta-hexosaminidase forms are specific for the oocyte, test cells and follicle cells.  相似文献   

20.
Elevation of the vitelline coat of eggs of the ascidian, Halocynthia roretzi , was induced by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate or phorbol-12, 13-didecanoate, but not by their 4-epimers. After elevation of the vitelline coat in this way, eggs were unable to undergo cleavage on addition of sperm. This elevation of the vitelline coat by phorbol esters was inhibited by specific inhibitors of trypsin-like enzyme, calmodulin, phospholipase A2, and protein kinase C. In association with elevation of the vitelline coat, a trypsin-like enzyme was released from the eggs. The properties of this enzyme were similar to those of the enzyme released by calcium ionophore, which also induced elevation of the vitelline coat, suggesting that similar exocytosis of intracellular granules occurred in both cases. Calmodulin, possibly involved in the elevation process, was isolated from eggs and characterized.  相似文献   

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