Abstract

Changes in MPF and MAPK activities during meiotic maturation of goat oocytes were investigated. Detection of MPF activity occurred concomitantly with GVBD, increased at MI, decreased during anaphase-telophase I transition, and increased thereafter in MII oocytes. The appearance of MAPK activity was delayed compared to MPF activity. MAPK activity increased after GVBD and persisted during the MI-MII transition. Whether MAPK was implicated in goat oocyte meiotic competence was also investigated by using oocytes from different follicle size categories that arrest at specific stages of the maturation process (GV, GVBD, MI, and MII). Results indicate that the ability of goat oocytes to resume meiosis is not directly related to the presence of Erk2. The ability to phosphorylate MAPK is acquired by the oocyte during follicular growth after the ability to resume meiosis. GVBD-arrested oocytes exhibited a high level of MPF activity after 27 hr of culture. However, 28% of oocytes from this group contained inactive MAPK, and 72% exhibited high MAPK activity. In addition, 29% of GVBD-arrested oocytes contained a residual interphasic network without recruitment of microtubules around the condensed chromosomes; 71% of GVBD-arrested oocytes displayed recruitment of microtubules near the condensed chromosomes and contained asters of microtubules distributed throughout the cytoplasm. These results indicate that oocytes arrested at GVBD were not exactly at the same point in the meiotic cell cycle progression, and suggest that MAPK could be implicated in the regulation of microtubule organization. The data presented here suggest that in goat oocytes, MAPK is not implicated in the early events of meiosis resumption, but rather in post-GVBD events such as spindle formation and MII arrest.

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