Abstract

To determine the role of intracellular Ca2+ in compaction, the first morphogenetic event in embryogenesis, we analyzed preimplantation mouse embryos under several decompacting conditions, including depletion of extracellular Ca2+, blocking of Ca2+ channels, and inhibition of microfilaments, calmodulin, and intracellular Ca2+ release. Those treatments induced decompaction of mouse morulae and simultaneously induced changes in cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration and deregionalization of E-cadherin and fodrin. When morulae were allowed to recompact, the location of both proteins recovered. In contrast, actin did not change its cortical location with compaction nor with decompaction-recompaction. Calmodulin localized in areas opposite to cell-cell contacts in eight-cell stage embryos before and after compaction. Inhibition of calmodulin with trifluoperazine induced its delocalization while morulae decompacted. A nonspecific rise of intracellular free Ca2+ provoked by ionomycin did not affect the compacted shape. Moreover, the same decompacting treatments when applied to uncompacted embryos did not produce any change in intracellular Ca2+. Our results demonstrate that in preimplantation mouse embryos experimentally induced stage-specific changes of cell shape are accompanied by changes of intracellular free Ca2+ and redistribution of the cytoskeleton-related proteins E-cadherin, fodrin, and calmodulin. We conclude that intracellular Ca2+ specifically is involved in compaction and probably regulates the function and localization of cytoskeleton elements.

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