A Factor That Interrupts the Cell Cycle at G2 or Prophase is Present in Full-Grown Frog Oocytes |
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Authors: | Yutaka Sadakane Yasuhiro Iwao |
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Affiliation: | Biological Institute, Faculty of Science, Yamaguchi University, Yamaguchi 753, Japan |
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Abstract: | Full-grown amphibian oocytes that had been arrested at meiotic prophase I contained an activity that prevented the cell cycle from progressing beyond a G2-like stage. Injection of the contents of germinal vesicles (GV-content) or cytoplasm obtained from oocytes of the frog Rana rugosa prevented fertilized eggs of Cynops pyrrhogaster or Bufo japonicus from cleaving. The nuclei in the arrested eggs consisted of thin chromosomes and nucleolus-like particles enclosed within clear nuclear membrane and their volume increased as a function of time after injection. Cycling of maturation-promoting factor (MPF) did not occur in the injected eggs, but DNA synthesis was not disturbed. The injection of exogenous MPF into the eggs induced the reinitiation of the cell cycle with progression to the M phase and subsequent cleavage. Furthermore, the injection into the full-grown oocytes of Bufo inhibited induction of the maturation of oocytes by progesterone. These results demonstrate that a factor that arrests the cell cycle either at a G2-like stage of mitosis or at prophase in meiosis is present both in the GV and cytoplasm of frog oocytes. We refer to this factor as a G2-specific cytostatic factor (G2-CSF). G2-CSF may play an important role not only in the physiological arrest at prophase I in meiosis, but also in regulation of the G2/M transition in the cell cycle of early embryonic cells. |
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