Abstract

Mammalian oocytes are arrested at the diplotene phase of the first meiotic division until ovulation. In the mouse, germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) and progression to metaphase II is thought to be triggered by a positive signal originating in the follicular cells following stimulation by the luteinizing hormone (LH) surge. Isolated, fully grown oocytes can also undergo spontaneous reinitiation of meiosisin vitroin the absence of gonadotrophin stimulation. To investigate the mechanism of meiotic resumption, inhibitors of phosphoinositide metabolism and an intracellular calcium chelator were used during maturationin vitrounder different conditions. In a series of experiments, isolated cumulus cell–oocyte complexes (COCs) maintained in meiotic arrest by hypoxanthine were induced to resume meiosis by treatment with follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). Under these conditions, both LiCl and neomycin, which inhibit phosphoinositide hydrolysis, produced a dose-dependent inhibitory effect on meiotic resumption. Similar results were obtained when FSH-induced meiotic resumption was observed in the presence of the acetoxymethyl ester form of 1,2-bis(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid (BAPTA/AM), an intracellular calcium chelator. In hypoxanthine-arrested oocytes, GVBD induced by epidermal growth factor (EGF), which mimics FSH action inin vitromaturation, was also repressed by LiCl and neomycin. Conversely, meiotic resumption triggered by a pulse of 8-bromo-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (8-Br cAMP) was not affected by these two inhibitors. In experiments in which oocytes were cultured under conditions which permit spontaneous meiotic maturation, resumption of meiosis was not affected by either inhibition of phosphoinositide hydrolysis or chelation of intracellular calcium. Therefore, it appears that meiotic resumption induced by hormone stimulation requires activation of the phosphoinositide pathway and mobilization of intracellular calcium. In contrast, spontaneous maturation probably occurs through a different mechanism because it is not affected by inhibition of this signaling pathway.

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