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Surface area change at fertilization: Resorption of the mosaic membrane
Authors:Thomas E Schroeder
Institution:University of Washington, Friday Harbor Laboratories, Friday Harbor, Washington 98250 USA
Abstract:Eggs of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (sea urchin) have a surface area of 41,000 μm2 before fertilization as determined by quantitative transmission and scanning electron microscopy. Within a minute after fertilization 18,000 cortical vesicles contribute an additional 57,000 μm2 to form a mosaic membrane with the original plasma membrane. However, by 16 min after fertilization the total area of the egg is only 45,000 μm2, indicating a rapid resorption of surface. Calculations of surface area depend in large part upon the numbers and dimensions of microvilli, after careful compensations are made for specimen shrinkage. The 134,000 microvilli per egg are 0.35 μm long before fertilization. They elongate to 1.0 μm in the first few minutes and then soon shorten to 0.5 μm. Even at their longest, microvilli do not accommodate all of the surface area of cortical vesicle membrane. The merger of cortical vesicle membranes and the plasma membrane was demonstrated many years ago and is not in doubt; however, this study indicates that the resulting mosaic membrane is not a long-lived, simple arithmetic combination of its components. Rather, the mosaic membrane undergoes a rapid and dynamic shrinkage by a mechanism which is not apparent on the basis of egg topography alone. The absolute values of egg surface area and dynamic changes in the surface are discussed in relation to physiological events accompanying fertilization.
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