Abstract
The present study shows that Ca(2+) calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) is physiologically activated in fertilized mouse oocytes and is involved in the Ca(2+) response pathways that link the fertilization Ca(2+) signal to meiosis resumption and cortical granule (CG) exocytosis. After 10 min of insemination, CaM kinase II activity increased transiently, then peaked at 1 h and remained elevated 30 min later when most of the oocytes had completed the emission of the second polar body. In contrast, in ethanol-activated oocytes the early transient activation of CaM kinase II in response to a monotonic Ca(2+) rise was not followed by any subsequent increase. Inhibition of CaM kinase II by 20 micromol/l myristoylated-AIP (autocamtide-2-related inhibitory peptide) negatively affected MPF (maturing promoting factor) inactivation, cell cycle resumption and CG exocytosis in both fertilized and ethanol-activated oocytes. These results indicate that the activation of CaM kinase II in mouse oocytes is differently modulated by a monotonic or repetitive Ca(2+) rise and that it is essential for triggering regular oocyte activation.
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