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1.
The localization of centromeres in mature human sperm was shown by immunofluorescent labeling and nonisotopic in situ hybridization. In the decondensed nucleus structural elements (dimers, tetramers, linear arrays and V shape structures) formed by individual centromeres of nonhomologous chromosomes were observed. They organize the compact chromocenter, which was shown for nuclei decondensed to a low extent. The chromocenter is buried inside the nucleus; in contrast, telomeric regions of chromosomes were tentatively localized on the periphery. Thus, a gross architecture, which can influence selective unpackaging of the paternal genome upon fertilization, exists in human sperm.  相似文献   

2.
The relationship between the timing of both sperm nuclear decondensation and male pronucleus formation in the oocyte and the relative level of disulfide bonds within the sperm nucleus was evaluated. Since reduction of sperm nuclear disulfide (S-S) bonds is a prerequisite for sperm nuclear decondensation in vitro and in vivo, we hypothesized that sperm nuclei with relatively few S-S bonds would require less time to decondense in the oocyte than sperm nuclei with higher numbers of S-S bonds, and that male pronucleus formation would occur more rapidly as well. Four types of hamster sperm nuclei, in which the extent of S-S bonding differed, were microinjected into hamster oocytes, and the time course of sperm nuclear decondensation and male pronucleus formation was charted. Cauda epididymal sperm nuclei, which are rich in S-S bonds, required 45-60 min to decondense. In contrast, nuclei containing few S-S bonds (namely sonication-resistant spermatid nuclei and cauda epididymal sperm nuclei treated in vitro with the S-S bond-reducing agent dithiothreitol) decondensed within 5-10 min of microinjection. Caput epididymal sperm nuclei, with intermediate S-S bond content, decondensed in 10-20 min. Regardless of when decondensation occurred, formation of the male pronucleus never preceded that of the female pronucleus, which occurred 1.25-1.5 h after microinjection. However, sperm nuclei with few S-S bonds were more likely than S-S rich nuclei to transform into male pronuclei in synchrony with the formation of the female pronucleus. We conclude that the timing sperm nuclear decondensation and pronucleus formation depends in part upon the S-S bond content of the sperm nucleus.  相似文献   

3.
B. Dressler  M. Schmid 《Chromosoma》1976,58(4):387-391
On the chromosomes of the rooster the constitutive heterochromatin (C-bands) is to be found for the most part at the centromeres. The position of the centric heterochromatin in spermatids and sperm is not randomly distributed. In early, round spermatids one heterochromatic block lies at this exact position on the membrane that develops into the tip of the sperm nucleus (acrosomal chromocenter). During the elongation of the spermatid nucleus another heterochromatic block comes to lie on the basal nuclear membrane. The other centromeres arrange themselves tandem-wise between the acrosomal and the basal chromocenters. Comparisons have been made between this specific arrangement and the location of chromosomes in the sperm of amphibians and mammalians.  相似文献   

4.
Giant trophoblast nuclei of the mouse and the rat, known to contain hundreds, or even thousands, of times the haploid amount of DNA, have been studied by a number of cytological techniques. These nuclei appear in two morphological states:“reticulate,” in which large numbers of chromatin threads of uniform size intermingle throughout the nucleus, often radiating from clumps of heterochromatin adjacent to the nucleoli, and “homogeneous,” in which the chromatin is more evenly dispersed and individual threads are more difficult to distinguish. Intermediate morphologies are also observed. In neither case were structures resembling polytene chromosomes discernible. — Centromeric heterohromatin as revealed by the Giemsa BSG technique has been quantitatively analyzed in giant versus diploid trophoblast nuclei. Although the median number of chromocenters is slightly greater in giant than in diploid nuclei, the range is similar. In both cases, the chromocenter number is usually less than the diploid number of chromosome pairs, indicating the attraction between centromeres not only of homologous, but also of heterologous, chromosomes. By scanning microdensitometry, we have observed a constant ratio of chromocenter area: total nuclear area in giant cells. This ratio, which likely reflects the ratio of chromocenter volume: total nuclear volume, is in good agreement with that of satellite DNA: total DNA.  相似文献   

5.
Using fluorescence in situ hybridization, conventional epifluorescence microscopy, and laser scanning confocal microscopy followed by three-dimensional reconstruction we describe a well-defined higher order packaging of the human genome in the sperm cell nucleus. This was determined by the spatial localization of centromere and telomere regions of all chromosomes and supported by localization of subtelomere sequences of chromosome 3 and the entire chromosome 2. The nuclear architecture in the human sperm is characterized by the clustering of the 23 centromeres into a compact chromocenter positioned well inside the nucleus. The ends of the chromosomes are exposed to the nuclear periphery where both the subtelomere and the telomere sequences of the chromosome arms are joined into dimers. Thus chromosomes in the human sperm nucleus are looped into a hairpin-like configuration. The biological implications of this nuclear architecture in spermatogenesis and male pronuclear formation following fertilization are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
To assess the role of the availability of sperm nuclear templates in the regulation of DNA synthesis, we correlated the morphological status of the fertilizing hamster sperm nucleus with its ability to synthesize DNA after in vivo and in vitro fertilization. Fertilized hamster eggs were incubated in 3H-thymidine for varying periods before autoradiography. None of the decondensed sperm nuclei nor early (Stage I) male pronuclei present after in vivo or in vitro fertilization showed incorporation of label, even in polyspermic eggs in which more advanced pronuclei were labeled. In contrast, medium-to-large pronuclei (mature Stage II pronuclei) consistently incorporated 3H-thymidine. To investigate the contribution of egg cytoplasmic factors to the regulation of DNA synthesis, we examined the timing of DNA synthesis by microinjected sperm nuclei in eggs in which sperm nuclear decondensation and male pronucleus formation were accelerated experimentally by manipulation of sperm nuclear disulfide bond content. Although sperm nuclei with few or no disulfide bonds decondense and form male pronuclei faster than nuclei rich in disulfide bonds, the onset of DNA synthesis was not advanced. We conclude the the fertilizing sperm nucleus does not become available to serve as a template for DNA synthesis until it has developed into a mature Stage II pronucleus, and that, as with decondensation and pronucleus formation, DNA synthesis also depends upon egg cytoplasmic factors.  相似文献   

7.
These studies were designed to test the hypothesis that sperm nuclear decondensation and male pronuclear formation during hamster fertilization depend upon the ability of the fertilized oocyte to reduce sperm nuclear disulfide bonds. In a first series of experiments, treatment of mature oocytes with the sulfhydryl blocking agent iodoacetamide or the glutathione oxidant diamide caused a dose-dependent inhibition of decondensation in microinjected sperm nuclei. Inhibition of decondensation was not observed, however, when sperm nuclei were treated in vitro with dithiothreitol (DTT) to reduce disulfide bonds prior to their microinjection. In a second series of experiments, germinal vesicle (GV)-intact oocytes and pronuclear eggs, in which mature, disulfide-rich sperm nuclei do not decondense, were found to support the decondensation of disulfide-poor DTT-treated sperm nuclei or testicular spermatid nuclei. The decondensed sperm nuclei were not, however, transformed into male pronuclei. The results of these studies suggest: (1) that sperm nuclear decondensation in the hamster requires disulfide bond reduction, (2) that GV-intact oocytes and pronuclear eggs lack sufficient reducing power to effect sperm nuclear decondensation, and (3) that disulfide bond reduction is required but not sufficient for pronuclear formation.  相似文献   

8.
Previous studies from this (Zirkin et al., '80) and other (Marushige and Marushige, '78) laboratories have shown that proteinase associated with mammalian sperm nuclei is involved in thiol-induced sperm nuclear decondensation and protamine degradation in vitro. The results of these in vitro studies suggested the exciting possibility that the sperm nucleus itself might contribute proteinase involved in its subsequent in vivo decondensation during fertilization. In the present study, microinjection methods were used to test this possibility directly. Control hamster sperm nuclei, which exhibited proteinase activity, decondensed when incubated in vitro with disulfide reducing agent. As expected, these nuclei also decondensed when microinjected into ovulated hamster oocytes and formed morphologically normal pronuclei. When the proteinase associated with isolated sperm nuclei was removed with 0.5 M salt or inhibited with nitrophenyl-p-guanidinobenzoate, the nuclei were rendered incapable of decondensing in response to disulfide reducing agent in vitro. However, when these nuclei were microinjected into eggs, they decondensed and transformed into pronuclei. These results provide direct evidence that sperm-associated proteinase is not required for sperm nuclear decondensation and formation of the male pronucleus during fertilization.  相似文献   

9.
The location of centromeric protein CENP-B and telomeric protein TRF2/MTBP in the mouse spermatogenic line has been studied using indirect immunofluorescent and immunoelectron microscopy. CENP-B localized to the heterochromatic parts of the nuclei at meiotic stages. A clearly distinct chromocenter forms in the nucleus at stages 3-4 of spermatid maturation; CENP-B localizes in it and in the area adjacent to the future acrosome. CENP-B localization in the subacrosomal area and in the chromocenters' periphery demonstrates that centromeres are organized in two groups in mouse spermatozoa, unlike human centromeres. TRF2/MTBP concentrates around the forming chromocenter at spermiogenesis early stages. The TRF2/MTBP main signal migrates into the area of acrosomal membrane at the course of spermatozoon maturation. TRF2/MTBP never localizes inside the synaptonemal complex but can be found in the areas where the synaptonemal complex attaches to the nuclear envelope. At the pachytene and diplotene stages when chromosomes separate from the nuclear envelope, some amount of the protein remains bound to the nuclear membrane while the other part reveals itself in chromosomes. TRF2/MTBP accumulates in the future acrosome from the very beginning of its formation. In the mature spermatozoon TRF2/MTBP decorates the acrosomal membrane as well as spreads in condensed chromatin.  相似文献   

10.
We report the isolation and characterization of a new nuclear structure from spermatozoa of the golden Syrian hamster which we term the nuclear annulus. The nuclear annulus was located at the implantation fossa, the point at which the tail is joined to the sperm head, inside the nucleus adjacent to the inner nuclear envelope. Extraction of sperm nuclei with 2 M NaCl and 10 mM dithiothreitol caused the solubilization of the protamines and DNA decondensation. This released the DNA from its structural constraints except that the DNA remained anchored to the nuclear annulus, which survived the extraction procedure. Nuclear annuli were isolated and examined by scanning electron microscopy. The nuclear annulus was a double-crescent, ring-shaped structure, 2.10 +/- 0.16 micron long and 1.36 +/- 0.13 micron wide. We believe that the nuclear annulus may play an important role in the organization of sperm DNA.  相似文献   

11.
Our objective was to examine the ability of nucleate and anucleate fragments of artificially activated mouse eggs to transform sperm nucleus into male pronucleus. To this end, zona-free oocytes in metaphase II were activated by ethanol and bisected into halves (one with the spindle, the other anucleate) either within 10 to 20 min (series A) or 3 or 5 hr later (series B). In series A, the fragments were inseminated 3,5, and 8 h after activation, and in series B. 3 and 5 h after activation. Both nucleate and anucleate fragments lose the capability of transforming sperm nucleus into fully formed pronucleus sometime between 3 and 5 h after activation. In 8 h old parthenogenetic fragments, the majority of sperm nuclei remain unchanged or begin decondensation but never reach the stage of an early pronucleus. In over 1/3 of anucleate fragments of this age group, sperm nuclei develop defectively: chromatin decondenses inside the persisting nuclear envelope. In other experimental groups, the incidence of these abnormal sperm nuclei varies between 0 and 10%. In general, the anuclcate fragments retain the capability to transform sperm nuclei (fully or partially) longer than their nuclear counterparts. This difference may be accounted for by a different level of substances required for pronuclcar growth (extrachromosomal constituents of the germinal vesicle and nuclear lamins): high and constant in the cytoplasm of anucleate egg halves and low and progressively decreasing in the nucleate halves because of their putative uptake by the female pronucleus. However, the cytoplasmic factors responsible for the initial stages of transformation (nuclear envelope breakdown, chromatin decondensation) become eventually inactivated both in the presence and in the absence of a female pronucleus.  相似文献   

12.
13.
To assess the structural stability of mammalian sperm nuclei and make interspecies comparisons, we microinjected sperm nuclei from six different species into hamster oocytes and monitored the occurrence of sperm nuclear decondensation and male pronucleus formation. The time course of sperm decondensation varied considerably by species: human and mouse sperm nuclei decondensed within 15 to 30 min of injection, and chinchilla and hamster sperm nuclei did so within 45 to 60 min, but bull and rat sperm nuclei remained intact over this same period of time. Male pronuclei formed in oocytes injected with human, mouse, chinchilla, and hamster sperm nuclei, but rarely in oocytes injected with bull or rat sperm nuclei. However, when bull sperm nuclei were pretreated with dithiothreitol (DTT) in vitro to reduce protamine disulfide bonds prior to microinjection, they subsequently decondensed and formed pronuclei in the hamster ooplasm. Condensed rat spermatid nuclei, which lack disulfide bonds, behaved similarly. The same six species of sperm nuclei were induced to undergo decondensation in vitro by treatment with DTT and detergent, and the resulting changes in nuclear size were monitored by phase-contrast microscopy and flow cytometry. As occurred in the oocyte, human sperm nuclei decondensed the fastest in vitro, followed shortly by chinchilla, mouse, and hamster and, after a lag, by rat and bull sperm nuclei. Thus species differences in sperm nuclear stability exist and appear to be related to the extent and/or efficiency of disulfide bonding in the sperm nuclei, a feature that may, in turn, be determined by the type(s) of sperm nuclear protamine(s) present.  相似文献   

14.
We report heparin-induced decondensation of human, mouse, and bull sperm nuclei. Decondensation did not occur if the spermatozoa were intact but only if the membranes were severely damaged by freezing and thawing or by treatment with a detergent. If a disulphide bond reducing agent (thiol) was absent, decondensation of human sperm nuclei was usually a relatively slow process, with large interindividual variation. Mouse and bull sperm nuclei did not decondense in the absence of a thiol. With a thiol relatively low concentrations of heparin induced a rapid decondensation of the sperm nuclei of all three species. The decondensation activity was not specific for heparin; other polyanions were also active, with heparin being the most effective compound. It is supposed that heparin and other polyanions induce sperm nuclear decondensation because they deplete protamines from the chromatin. Thus the negatively charged phosphate groups of the DNA are no longer opposed by positively charged protamines. Consequently the mutual repulsion of unopposed phosphate groups causes the DNA molecules to stretch, which results in an increase of the sperm nuclear volume. Since heparin and other polyanions induce decondensation under physiological pH and temperature, polyanions might also be active in the oocyte.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Treatment of bull spermatozoa with DDC--Na/dithiothreitol results in the swelling and decondensation of nuclear chromatin. The structures formed at the final stages of decondensation are morphologically similar to the male pronucleus. Cytophotometric analysis has shown that decondensation of chromatin in the gametes in followed by quantitative changes of basic nuclear proteins. In partly--decondensed sperm nuclei the intensity of histone staining increases as a result of the appearance of extra reactive groups. In fully decondensed nuclei there remain only 54% of histones of the original haploid level. Nucleoproteins revealed in the sperm with fully dispersed chromatin must be histones of the somatic type.  相似文献   

17.
Cell-free extracts from animal Xenopus laevis egg could induce chromatin decondensation and pronuclear formation from demembranated plant (Orychophragmus violaceus) sperm. When incubated with Xenopus egg extracts, the demembranated sperm began to swell and then gradually decondensed. The assembly of the nuclear envelope in the reconstituted nuclei was visualized by means of electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy. Membrane vesicles fused to form the double envelope around the periphery of the decondensed chromatin. The morphology of the newly formed nuclei, with a double membrane, was similar to that of nuclei after fertilization. The electron micrograph of the whole-mount prepared nuclear matrix--lamina showed the reconstituted nucleus to be filled with a dense network.  相似文献   

18.
Decondensation of compact and inactive sperm chromatin by egg cytoplasm at fertilization is necessary to convert the male germ cell chromatin to an active somatic form. We studied decondensation of sea urchin sperm nuclei in a cell-free extract of sea urchin eggs to define conditions promoting decondensation. We find that egg cytosol specifically phosphorylates two sperm-specific (Sp) histones in vitro in the same regions as in vivo. This activity is blocked by olomoucine, an inhibitor of cdc2-like kinases, but not by chelerythrine, an inhibitor of protein kinase C (PKC). PKC phosphorylates and solubilizes the sperm nuclear lamina, one requirement for decondensation. Olomoucine, which does not inhibit lamina removal, blocks sperm nuclear decondensation in the same concentration range over which it is effective in blocking Sp histone phosphorylation. In a system free of other soluble proteins, neither PKC nor cdc2 alone elicit sperm chromatin decondensation, but the two act synergistically to decondense sperm nuclei. We conclude that two kinases activities are sufficient for sea urchin male pronuclear decondensation in vitro, a lamin kinase (PKC) and a cdc2-like Sp histone kinase.  相似文献   

19.
A cell-free preparation obtained from extracts of activated Xenopus laevis eggs induced chromatin decondensation and nuclear formation from demembranated Xenopus sperm nuclei.Electron microscopy revealed that the reassembled nucleus had a double-layered nuclear memblane,nuclear pore complexes,and decondensed chromatin etc.Indirect immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated the presence of lamina in newly assembled nuclei.Western-blotting results showed that lamin LII was present in egg extracts and in lamina of the reassembled nuclei which were previously reported to contain only egg derived lamin LIII.  相似文献   

20.
Sea urchin and sea star oocyte extracts contain proteolytic activities that are active against sperm basic nuclear proteins (SNBP). This SNBP degradation has been related to the decondensation of sperm chromatin as a possible model to male pronuclei formation. We have studied the presence of this proteolytic activity in Holothuria tubulosa (sea cucumber) and its possible relationship with sperm nuclei decondensation. The mature oocyte extracts from H. tubulosa contain a proteolytic activity to SNBP located in the macromolecular fraction of the egg‐jelly layer. SNBP degradation occurred both on sperm nuclei and on purified SNBP, histones being more easily degraded than protein Øo (sperm‐specific protein). SNBP degradation was found to be dependent on concentration, incubation time, presence of Ca2+, pH, and this activity could be a serine‐proteinase. Thermal denaturalization of the oocyte extracts (80°C, 10–15 min) inactivates its proteolytic activity on SNBP but does not affect sperm nuclei decondensation. These results would suggest that sperm nuclei decondensation occurs by a mechanism different from SNBP degradation. Thus, the sperm nuclei decondensation occurs by a thermostable factor(s) and the removal of linker SNBP (H1 and protein Øo) will be a first condition in the process of sperm chromatin remodeling.  相似文献   

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