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1.
Hajnal A  Berset T 《The EMBO journal》2002,21(16):4317-4326
In the Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodite germline, spatially restricted mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling controls the meiotic cell cycle. First, the MAPK signal is necessary for the germ cells to progress through pachytene of meiotic prophase I. As the germ cells exit pachytene and enter diplotene/diakinesis, MAPK is inactivated and the developing oocytes arrest in diakinesis (G(2)/M arrest). During oocyte maturation, a signal from the sperm reactivates MAPK to promote M phase entry. Here, we show that the MAPK phosphatase LIP-1 dephosphorylates MAPK as germ cells exit pachytene in order to maintain MAPK in an inactive state during oocyte development. Germ cells lacking LIP-1 fail to arrest the cell cycle at the G(2)/M boundary, and they enter a mitotic cell cycle without fertilization. LIP-1 thus coordinates oocyte cell cycle progression and maturation with ovulation and fertilization.  相似文献   

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In mammals, the final number of oocytes available for reproduction of the next generation is defined at birth. Establishment of this oocyte pool is essential for fertility. Mammalian primordial germ cells form and migrate to the gonad during embryonic development. After arriving at the gonad, the germ cells are called oogonia and develop in clusters of cells called germ line cysts or oocyte nests. Subsequently, the oogonia enter meiosis and become oocytes. The oocyte nests break apart into individual cells and become packaged into primordial follicles. During this time, only a subset of oocytes ultimately survive and the remaining immature eggs die by programmed cell death. This phase of oocyte differentiation is poorly understood but molecules and mechanisms that regulate oocyte development are beginning to be identified. This review focuses on these early stages of female germ cell development.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract. Ovarian ultrastructure and oogenesis in two pycnogonid species, Cilunculus armatus and Ammothella biunguiculata , were investigated. The ovary is morphologically and functionally divided into trunk and pedal parts. The former represents the germarium and contains very young germ cells in a pachytene or postpachytene phase, whereas the latter houses developing previtellogenic and vitellogenic oocytes and represents the vitellarium. Intercellular bridges were occasionally found between young (trunk) germ cells. This indicates that in pycnogonids, as in other animal groups, at the onset of oogenesis clusters of germ cells are generated. As nurse cells are absent in the ovaries of investigated species, the clusters must secondarily split into individual oocytes. In the vitellarium, the oocytes are located outside the ovary. Each oocyte is connected to the ovarian tissue by a stalk composed of several somatic cells. The stalk cells directly associated with the oocyte are equipped with irregular projections that reach the oocyte plasma membrane. This observation suggests that the stalk cells may play a nutritive role. The ooplasm of vitellogenic oocytes comprises mitochondria, free ribosomes, stacks of annulate lamellae, active Golgi complexes, and vesicles derived from these complexes. Within the latter, numerous electron-dense bodies are present. We suggest that these bodies contribute to yolk formation.  相似文献   

5.
Oogenesis in Hydra occurs in so-called egg patches containing several thousand germ cells. Only one oocyte is formed per egg patch; the remaining germ cells differentiate as nurse cells. Whether and how nurse cells contribute cytoplasm to the developing oocyte has been unclear. We have used tissue maceration to characterize the differentiation of oocytes and nurse cells in developing egg patches. We show that nurse cells decrease in size at the same time that developing oocytes increase dramatically in volume. Nurse cells are also tightly attached to oocytes at this stage and confocal images of egg patches stained with the fluorescent membrane dye FM 4-64 clearly show large gaps (10 microm) in the cell membranes separating nurse cells from the developing oocyte. We conclude that nurse cells directly transfer cytoplasm to the developing oocyte. Following this transfer of cytoplasm, nurse cells undergo apoptosis and are phagocytosed by the oocyte. These results demonstrate that basic mechanisms of alimentary oogenesis typical of Caenorhabditis and Drosophila are already present in the early metazoan Hydra.  相似文献   

6.
emo-1(oz1) is a member of a class of hermaphrodite sterile mutations in Caenorhabditis elegans that produce endomitotic oocytes in the gonad arm. Oocytes in emo-1(oz1) mutants exhibit multiple defects during oogenesis. After meiotic maturation, ovulation fails, trapping oocytes in the gonad arm where they become endomitotic. emo-1 encodes a homologue of the Sec61p gamma subunit, a protein necessary for translocation of secretory and transmembrane proteins into the endoplasmic reticulum of yeast and mammalian cells. A putative emo-1 null mutation, oz151, displays embryonic lethality. The oz1 sterile mutation is a transposable element insertion into the emo-1 3'' untranslated region that almost completely eliminates germline mRNA accumulation. Genetic mosaic analysis using the oz1 allele indicates that emo-1(+) expression in germ cells is required for fertility. The J67 monoclonal antibody, which recognizes an oocyte surface antigen (Strome, S. 1986. In Gametogenesis and the Early Embryo. J.G. Gall, editor. Alan R. Liss, Inc., New York. 77-95.), does not stain oz1 oocytes, a finding consistent with defective protein transport in the mutant. We propose that the emo-1 gene product acts in the transport of secreted and transmembrane proteins in C. elegans oocytes, and is necessary for both oogenesis and the coupling of ovulation with meiotic maturation.  相似文献   

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Lee MH  Ohmachi M  Arur S  Nayak S  Francis R  Church D  Lambie E  Schedl T 《Genetics》2007,177(4):2039-2062
The raison d'etre of the germline is to produce oocytes and sperm that pass genetic material and cytoplasmic constituents to the next generation. To achieve this goal, many developmental processes must be executed and coordinated. ERK, the terminal MAP kinase of a number of signaling pathways, controls many aspects of development. Here we present a comprehensive analysis of MPK-1 ERK in Caenorhabditis elegans germline development. MPK-1 functions in four developmental switches: progression through pachytene, oocyte meiotic maturation/ovulation, male germ cell fate specification, and a nonessential function of promoting the proliferative fate. MPK-1 also regulates multiple aspects of cell biology during oogenesis, including membrane organization and morphogenesis: organization of pachytene cells on the surface of the gonadal tube, oocyte organization and differentiation, oocyte growth control, and oocyte nuclear migration. MPK-1 activation is temporally/spatially dynamic and most processes appear to be controlled through sustained activation. MPK-1 thus may act not only in the control of individual processes but also in the coordination of contemporaneous processes and the integration of sequential processes. Knowledge of the dynamic activation and diverse functions of MPK-1 provides the foundation for identification of upstream signaling cascades responsible for region-specific activation and the downstream substrates that mediate the various processes.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Each setigerous segment of the protandric polychaete Ophryotrocha puerilis contains two primordial germ cells. A ventral furrow in the gut wall together with the peritoneal lining of the gut forms a genital blood vessel. The gonocytes are located within the peritoneum of this genital blood vessel. At sexual maturity the gonocytes undergo a proliferation cycle, the first division of which gives rise to a cell which is extruded into a forming outpocketing of the coelomic lining. The stem cell remains within the peritoneum. Inside the forming gonad the detached cell goes through a series of four mitotic divisions. The resulting 16 cells are interconnected by cytoplasmic bridges. These bridges are arranged in a very regular pattern which allows the mitotic cycles to be followed. While remaining still within the gonad the 16 cells begin to synthesize yolk and to take up exogenous yolk precursors. At this stage a differentiation into oocytes and nurse cells becomes visible. The oocytes deposit yolk platelets of the definitive size whereas the polyploid nurse cells produce only small yolk bodies that are passed to the adjacent oocytes. In a later stage the cell bridges between adjacent nurse cells are cut and pairs of one oocyte and one nurse cell are released to the coelomic cavity during breakdown of the gonadal sac. Oocyte-nurse cell-complexes then freely float in the coelomic fluid. The proliferation of gonadal cells is well synchronized within one segment. In anterior segments, however, gonadal proliferation usually begins earlier than in posterior segments but smaller oocytes in posterior segments catch up within a few days. Finally a batch of oocytes is produced in which all the oocytes are of the same size (120 m). The origin of the primordial germ cells remains unknown.  相似文献   

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The polychaete Ophryotrocha does not show a distinct breeding season. Egg masses are produced throughout the year (continuous breeder sensu Olive and Clark, 1978). A female specimen may contain up to three different generations of oocytes with oocyte growth and maturation in each batch being well synchronized. Oogenesis takes about 18 days from proliferation of the oogonia to mature eggs. In each segment pairs of sister cells interconnected by cytoplasmic bridges are located in outpocketings of the ventral mesentery which form the gonad wall. Presumptive oocytes and nurse cells are not easily distinguished at that time. Vitellogenesis is initiated while both oocytes and nurse cells are still in the ovary. Mitochondria, multivesicular bodies (transformed mitochondria ?), dense bodies, preformed yolk bodies of smaller size and lipid droplets are probably passed through the cytoplasmic bridge from the nurse cell to the oocyte. Yolk formation includes different mechanisms and materials of different origin. Autosynthetic yolk formation predominates during the first intraovarial growth phase. After detachment of oocyte-nurse cell-complexes from the gonad pinocytotic activity of nurse cells and particularly oocytes, increases considerably. The existence of coated vesicles suggests that external sources of yolk precursors contribute to yolk formation. Prior to oocyte maturation the remnants of the nurse cell are incorporated by oocytes.  相似文献   

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Xu X  Guo H  Wycuff DL  Lee M 《Experimental cell research》2007,313(11):2465-2475
During Caenorhabditis elegans ovulation, the somatic gonad integrates signals from germ cells and propels a mature oocyte into the spermatheca for fertilization. Previous work suggests that phosphoinositide signaling plays important roles in C. elegans fertility. To fully understand inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP(3)) signaling in ovulation, we have examined the function of phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 5' kinase (PIP5K) in C. elegans. Our results show that the C. elegans PIP5K homolog, ppk-1, is essential for ovulation in C. elegans; ppk-1 is mainly expressed in somatic gonad, and depletion of ppk-1 expression causes defective ovulation, reduced gonad sheath contractility, and sterility. Increased IP(3) signaling compensates for ppk-1 (RNAi)-induced sterility, suggesting that ppk-1 is linked to IP(3) signaling. These results demonstrate that ppk-1 plays an essential role in IP(3) signaling and cytoskeleton organization in somatic gonad.  相似文献   

14.

Background  

Female reproductive potential, or the ability to propagate life, is limited in mammals with the majority of oocytes lost before birth. In mice, surviving perinatal oocytes are enclosed in ovarian follicles for subsequent oocyte development and function in the adult. Before birth, fetal germ cells of both sexes develop in clusters, or germline cysts, in the undifferentiated gonad. Upon sex determination of the fetal gonad, germ cell cysts become organized into testicular or ovarian cord-like structures and begin to interact with gonadal somatic cells. Although germline cysts and testicular cords are required for spermatogenesis, the role of cyst and ovarian cord formation in mammalian oocyte development and female fertility has not been determined.  相似文献   

15.
The structure of the gonad of the European eel (Anguilla anguilla [L.]), an “undifferentiated” gonochoristic teleost, was investigated by transmission electron microscopy from 6–8 cm elvers to 22 cm yellow eels with juvenile hermaphroditic gonads. The pear-shaped gonads of 6–8 cm elvers assume, in 12–15 cm eels, a lamellar shape and enlarge by migration of germ cells, which we refer to as primary primordial germ cells. In the gonads of ∼ 16 cm eels, the primary primordial germ cells multiply, giving rise to clusters of germ cells that have ultrastructural characteristics of the primary primordial germ cells but show giant mitochondria, enlarged Golgi complexes, and round bodies not limited by membranes. We refer to these as secondary primordial germ cells. In 16–18 cm eels, syncytial clones of oogonia interconnected by cytoplasmic bridges are also observed. In 18–22-cm-long eels, the gonads contain primordial germ cells, oogonial clones, early oocyte cysts, single oocytes in early growth stages, and primary spermatogonia. Such germ cells are present in the same cross section where they are either intermingled or are in areas of predominantly female germ cells close to areas with predominantly male germ cells. These gonads are juvenile hermaphroditic and should be considered ambisexual because in larger eels they differentiate either into an ovary or into a testis. Somatic cells always envelop the germ cells following their migration into the gonad. These somatic cells first show similar ultrastructural features and then differentiate either into early Sertoli cells investing spermatogonia, or into early follicular (granulosa) cells investing the early previtellogenic oocytes. In eels ∼ 14 cm long, primitive steroid-producing cells also migrate into the gonad. In the ambisexual gonad they differentiate either into immature Leydig cells in the male areas, or into early special cells of the theca in the female areas. Nerve fibers are joined to the steroid-producing cells. Gonad development and differentiation are also associated with structural changes of the connective tissue characterized by the progressive appearance and deposition of collagen fibrils first in the mesogonadium, then in the gonad vascular region, and then in the germinal region. The collagen-rich areas are massive in the male areas and reduced in the female ones. J. Morphol. 231:195–216, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

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CPEB is a sequence-specific RNA binding protein that regulates translation during vertebrate oocyte maturation. Adult female CPEB knockout mice contained vestigial ovaries that were devoid of oocytes; ovaries from mid-gestation embryos contained oocytes that were arrested at the pachytene stage. Male CPEB null mice also contained germ cells arrested at pachytene. The germ cells from the knockout mice harbored fragmented chromatin, suggesting a possible defect in homologous chromosome adhesion or synapsis. Two CPE-containing synaptonemal complex protein mRNAs, which interact with CPEB in vitro and in vivo, contained shortened poly(A) tails and mostly failed to sediment with polysomes in the null mice. Synaptonemal complexes were not detected in these animals. CPEB therefore controls germ cell differentiation by regulating the formation of the synaptonemal complex.  相似文献   

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Glossiphonia heteroclita has paired ovaries whose shape and dimensions change as oogenesis proceeds: during early previtellogenesis they are small and club-shaped, whereas during vitellogenesis they broaden and elongate considerably. During early oogenesis (previtellogenesis), each ovary is composed of an outer envelope (ovisac) that surrounds the ovary cavity and is filled with hemocoelomic fluid, in which a single and very convoluted ovary cord is bathed. The ovary cord consists of germline cells, including nurse cells and young oocytes surrounded by a layer of elongated follicle cells. Additionally, follicle cells with long cytoplasmic projections occur inside the ovary cord, where they separate germ cells from each other. The ovary cord contains thousands of nurse cells. Each nurse cell has one intercellular bridge, connecting it to a central anucleate cytoplasmic mass, the cytophore (rachis); it in turn is connected by one intercellular bridge with each growing oocyte. Numerous mitochondria, RER cisternae, ribosomes, and Golgi complexes are transported from the nurse cells, via the intercellular bridge and cytophore, to the growing oocytes. Oogenesis in G. heteroclita is synchronous with all oocytes in the ovary in the same stage of oogenesis. The youngest observed oocytes are slightly larger than nurse cells, and usually occupy the periphery of the ovary cord. As previtellogenesis proceeds, the oocytes gather a vast amount of cell organelles and become more voluminous. As a result, in late previtellogenesis the oocytes gradually protrude into the ovary cavity. Simultaneously with oocyte growth, the follicle cells differentiate into two subpopulations. The morphology of the follicle cells surrounding the nurse cells and penetrating the ovary cord does not change, whereas those enveloping the growing oocytes become more voluminous. Their plasma membrane invaginates deeply, forming numerous broad vesicles that eventually seem to form channels or conducts through which the hemocoelomic fluid can easily access the growing oocytes.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated oocyte development in Hydra vulgaris, a member of one of the oldest metazoan phyla. We show that oocyte determination involves a mechanism that establishes a subset of precursor interstitial cells competent to differentiate into oocytes. The oocyte is singled out from this subset and the competence of the remaining cells to become oocytes dramatically decreases as they adopt the alternative nurse cell fate. Progression through the nurse cell differentiation program requires the presence of the oocyte. When the oocyte is removed from the egg field, nurse cells abort their differentiation program, undergo apoptosis, and are phagocytosed and degraded by somatic epithelial cells. However, in the presence of the oocyte, nurse cells differentiate and enter an unusual apoptosis program where they are phagocytosed by the oocyte, but are not degraded. We show that the oocyte is able to induce this unusual apoptosis program in immature nurse cells that have not completed differentiation. A new model for oocyte development in Hydra is discussed.  相似文献   

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