Abstract
In the present study, we have employed a battery of colloidal gold-tagged lectins as probes in conjunction with quantitative analysis to demonstrate the distribution and changes of carbohydrate residues in the hamster zona pellucida (ZP) during ovarian follicular development and during transit of the oocyte through the oviduct after ovulation. High-resolution lectin-gold cytochemistry performed on thin sections of LR White-embedded ovaries revealed a moderate to strong reactivity to WGA, PNA, DSA, AAA, and MAA over the entire thickness of the ZP of ovarian oocytes at different stages of follicular development. Labeling intensity over the ZP progressively increased as follicles matured in the ovary. In parallel, there was an association of labeling by gold particles with cortical granules, stacks of Golgi saccules, and complex structures called vesicular aggregates in the oocyte proper especially during the late stages of follicular growth. In contrary, labeling with each of HPA, DBA, and BSAIB(4) was absent in the ovary but was found to be localized over Golgi complexes and secretory granules in the non-ciliated secretory cells of the oviduct. When ovulated oocytes were labeled with each of HPA, WGA, RCA-I, PNA, DSA, BSAIB(4), AAA, MAA, and DBA, the ZP and several organelles in the oocyte proper presented a differential distribution of lectin-binding sites. Quantitative analysis was also performed on labeling by lectin-gold complexes that bind specifically to the ZP of mature follicular and ovulated oocytes. Quantitative evaluation revealed heterogeneous labeling between the inner and the outer zone of the ZP. A significant increase in the labeling densities in both inner and outer ZP was noted when tissue sections of ovulated oocytes were labeled with RCA-I or AAA. Tissue sections of ovaries labeled with WGA demonstrated a significant increase in the density of labeling in the outer layer of the ZP. Labeling by PNA, DSA, and MAA, however, showed a significant decrease in both the inner and outer portions of the ZP. Together, these results suggest that in the hamster, glycoproteins carrying specific sugar residues are added to the ZP of ovarian follicles during the early stages of folliculogenesis and are processed through a common secretory machinery, and that there is a significant change in both the sugar moieties and distribution of glycoproteins in the ZP following ovulation. Our results also showed that the hamster oviduct plays an important role in contributing certain glycoproteins to the ZP suggesting that the sugar moieties of these oviductal glycoproteins may have functional significance in fertilization.
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