Abstract

We have used carbohydrate-binding proteins, or lectins, as tools to investigate the physiological phenomena associated with the preovulatory maturation of the oocyte-cumulus cell complex. Certain lectins are mitogens, and since other mitogenic agents such as growth factors are known to stimulate meiotic maturation and cumulus expansion, we tested the ability of lectins to provoke these physiological responses. Cumulus cell-enclosed oocytes (CEO) from primed mice were maintained in meiotic arrest in vitro with dibutyryl cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (dbcAMP) and treated with one of eleven different lectins. With the exception of pokeweed mitogen (PWM), all of the mitogenic lectins tested were able to induce germinal vesicle breakdown (GVB) in meiotically arrested oocytes, and this action required the presence of the somatic cumulus cells; in fact, either there was no effect or maturation was suppressed when cumulus cell-free oocytes (denuded oocytes; DO) were treated with lectins. None of the nonmitogenic lectins stimulated meiotic maturation in either CEO or DO. The mitogenic lectin concanavalin A (Con A) also induced maturation in CEO when meiotic arrest was maintained with hypoxanthine, guanosine, or 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. The kinetics of spontaneous oocyte maturation in inhibitor-free medium were not altered by Con A. Only the mitogenic lectins that induced meiotic maturation stimulated cumulus expansion, with Con A the most active lectin. The actions of Con A on the maturation of the oocyte-cumulus cell complex were inhibited by methyl-alpha-D-mannopyranoside as predicted by its sugar-binding specificity. These results demonstrate that (1) lectins can stimulate maturation of the mouse oocyte-cumulus cell complex; (2) mitogenicity is associated with the positive activity of the lectins; and (3) cumulus cells mediate the stimulatory action of lectins on oocyte maturation, while inhibition of GVB occurs at the oocyte level. These data support the idea that common signals mediate the mitogenic and maturation-inducing actions of lectins.

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