Abstract

In the starfish ovary, maturing oocytes stimulated by 1-methyladenine undergo synchronous germinal vesicle breakdown and then arrest in metaphase of the first meiotic division (metaphase I). Immediately after spawning, an increase of intracellular pH (pH(i)) from approximately 7.0 to approximately 7.3 is induced by Na(+)/H(+) antiporter in oocytes, and meiosis reinitiation occurs. Here we show that an endogenous substrate of the proteasome, polyubiquitinated cyclin B, was stable at pH 7.0, whereas it was degraded at pH 7.3. When the MAPK pathway was blocked by MEK inhibitor U0126, degradation of polyubiquitinated cyclin B occurred even at pH 7.0 without an increase of the peptidase activity of the proteasome. These results indicate that the proteasome activity at pH 7.0 is sufficient for degradation of polyubiquitinated cyclin B and that the MAPK pathway blocks the degradation of polyubiquitinated cyclin B in the maturing oocytes in the ovary. Immediately after spawning, the increase in pH(i) mediated by Na(+)/H(+) antiporter cancels the inhibitory effects of the MAPK pathway, resulting in the degradation of polyubiquitinated cyclin B and the release of the arrest. Thus, the key step of metaphase I arrest in starfish oocytes occurs after the polyubiqutination of cyclin B but before cyclin B proteolysis by the proteasome.

Highlights

  • Activity of the complex of cyclin B and Cdc2 kinase [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • These results indicate that metaphase I (MI) arrest is regulated by the processes that occur after polyubiquitination of cyclin B but before proteolysis by the proteasome

  • An endogenous substrate of the proteasome, polyubiquitinated cyclin B, was degraded within 40 min after a shift to pH 7.3, whereas it was stable at pH 7.0 for over 120 min

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Summary

Degradation of Polyubiquitinated Cyclin B at the MI Arrest

It has been widely believed that in starfish oocytes the meiotic cycles are completed without MI or MII arrest. We found that maturing oocytes after GVBD undergo arrest again at MI in the starfish ovary. The MI arrest is dependent on low intracellular pH (pHi) and active MAPK. In the current study, using cell-free preparations, we show that polyubiquitinated cyclin B remained stable at low pH. When MAPK was inhibited by U0126, degradation of polyubiquitinated cyclin B occurred even at low pH. These results indicate that MI arrest is regulated by the processes that occur after polyubiquitination of cyclin B but before proteolysis by the proteasome

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