Abstract

Activation of the teleost (Brachydanio) fish egg includes the exocytosis of cortical granules, the construction of a mosaic surface consisting of the unfertilized egg plasma membrane and the limiting membranes of the cortical granules, and the appearance of coated and smooth vesicles in the cytoplasm (Donovan and Hart, '82). Unfertilized and activated eggs were incubated in selected extracellular tracers to (1) determine experimentally if cortical granule exocytosis was coupled with the endocytosis of membrane during the cortical reaction, and (2) establish the intracellular pathway(s) by which internalized vesicles were processed. Unfertilized eggs incubated in dechlorinated tap water or Fish Ringer's solution containing either horseradish peroxidase (HRP; 10 mg/ml), native ferritin (12.5 mg/ml), or cationized ferritin (12.5 mg/ml) were activated as judged by cortical granule breakdown and elevation of the chorion. Cells treated with HRP and native ferritin exhibited a delay in cortical granule exocytosis when compared with water-activated eggs lacking the tracer. Each tracer was internalized through the formation of a coated vesicle from a coated pit. Since coated pits appeared to be topographically restricted to the perigranular membrane domain of the mosaic egg surface, their labeling, particularly with cationized ferritin, strongly suggested that the retrieved membrane was of cortical granule origin. Cationized ferritin and concanavalin A (Con A) coupled with either hemocyanin or ferritin labeled the surface of the unactivated egg and both domains of the mosaic egg surface. Transformation of the deep evacuated cortical granule crypt into later profiles of exocytosis was accompanied by increased Con A binding. Within activated egg cortices, HRP reaction product, native ferritin, and cationized ferritin were routinely localized in smooth vesicles, multivesicular bodies, and autophagic vacuoles. Occasionally, each tracer was found in small coated vesicles adjacent to the Golgi and within Golgi cisternae. The intracellular distribution of HRP, native ferritin, and cationized ferritin suggests that internalized membrane is primarily processed by organelles of the lysosomal compartment. A second and less significant pathway is the Golgi complex.

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