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Spatiotemporal analysis of Ca(2+) waves in relation to the sperm entry site and animal-vegetal axis during Ca(2+) oscillations in fertilized mouse eggs
Authors:Deguchi R  Shirakawa H  Oda S  Mohri T  Miyazaki S
Institution:Laboratory of Intracellular Metabolism, Department of Molecular Physiology, National Institute for Physiological Sciences, Myodaiji-cho, Okazaki, 444-8585, Japan. deguchi@ipc.miyakyo-u.ac.jp
Abstract:Fertilized mouse eggs exhibit repetitive rises in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration (Ca(2+)](i)) necessary for egg activation. Precise spatiotemporal dynamics of each Ca(2+)](i) rise were investigated by high-speed Ca(2+) imaging during early development of monospermic eggs. Every Ca(2+)](i) rise involved a Ca(2+) wave. In the first Ca(2+) transient, Ca(2+)](i) increased in two steps separated by a "shoulder" point, suggesting two distinct Ca(2+) release mechanisms. The first step was a Ca(2+) wave that propagated from the sperm-fusion site to its antipode in 4-5 s (velocity, approximately 20 microm/s in most eggs). The second step from the shoulder to the peak was a nearly uniform Ca(2+)](i) rise of 12-15 s. A slight cytoplasmic movement followed the Ca(2+) wave in the same direction and recovered in 25-35 s. These characteristics changed as follows, as Ca(2+) oscillations progressed during the second meiosis up to their cessation at the stage of pronuclei formation ( approximately 3 h after fertilization). (1) The duration of Ca(2+) transients became shorter. (2) The shoulder point shifted to higher levels and the first step occupied most of the rising phase. (3) The rate of Ca(2+)](i) rise became greater and wave speeds increased up to 80-100 microm/s or more. (4) The transient cytoplasmic movement always resulted from the Ca(2+) wave, although its displacement became smaller. (5) The Ca(2+) wave initiation site was freed from the sperm-fusion or -entry site and eventually localized in the cortex of the vegetal hemisphere. Since the shift of the wave initiation site to the vegetal cortex is observed in fertilized eggs of nemertean worms and ascidians, this might be an evolutionarily conserved feature.
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