Abstract
Actin is a permanent component of the cell nucleus involved in many nuclear processes. However, some nuclear functions of actin remain insufficiently explored. The role played by various extracellular stimuli in regulation of nuclear actin still remains enigmatic. Deviation of basic parameters of culture medium from optimal values is a member of the group of extracellular stimuli that are very important for mammalian embryos cultured in vitro. Change in culture medium pH from the level optimal for embryo homeostasis is one such signals. The purpose of this study was to investigate the intranuclear actin distribution in nuclei of two-cell mouse embryos under stress conditions induced by changes in extracellular pH. The pattern of actin localization has been tracked after short-term culturing of the embryos at optimal (pH 7.2), increased (pH 7.8), or decreased (pH 6.5) pH conditions. Analysis was carried out with confocal microscopy using methods of direct fluorescent and indirect immunofluorescent identification of actin. It has been shown that the change of culture medium pH from the optimum value is the signal that alters intranuclear actin distribution in nuclei of the embryonic cells. Culture of two-cell mouse embryos in suboptimal pH conditions (pH 6.5 and pH 7.8) induced alterations in the intranuclear actin localization, which, in particular, were expressed in accumulation of monomeric actin and the appearance of phalloidin-stainable actin in the nuclei. These changes, in our opinion, show some signs of similarity with stress-induced changes in nuclear-actin distribution, which, as has been reported earlier by a number of researchers, have been observed in the nuclei of somatic cells.
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