Abstract: | In this report we show that the first event of activation in the human oocyte, the Fertilization current (FC), is a slow transient outward current of 300 pA, which induces a gradual hyperpolarization of the plasma membrane from –20mV to –60mV, 60–120 min after insemination, followed by a repolarization to –20mV. Activation currents (AC) of 600-2,500 pA, induced by exposure to the calcium ionophore A23187 or by microinjection of InsP3 into the cytosol, are also outward. The AC are inhibited by preloading oocytes with EGTA suggesting they are calcium dependent. Since AC are 2–10-fold the amplitude of the FC the fertilizing spermatozoon in the human only activates a portion of the primary elements stored in the oocyte for triggering metabolic depression. Oocyte activation in the human resembles that in the hamster rather than other mammals or invertebrates studied to date. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc. |