Abstract
Maturation-promoting factor (MPF), a final trigger for initiating oocyte maturation, is activated in the oocyte cytoplasm, in response to maturation-inducing hormone (MIH) secreted from follicle cells surrounding the oocyte. MPF consists of cdc2 and cyclin B. We investigated the state of cdc2 and cyclin B in immature and mature oocytes of fishes (carp, catfish and lamprey) and amphibians (Xenopus, frog [Rana] and toad [Bufo]) using monoclonal antibodies raised against mouse cdc2, which also recognize fish and amphibian cdc2, and monoclonal antibodies against goldfish cyclin B1 and polyclonal antibodies against Xenopus cyclins B1 and B2. Anti-cdc2 and anti-cyclin B immunoblotting of oocyte extracts fractionated by gel filtration chromatography showed that immature oocytes from all of these species with the exception of Xenopus contained only monomeric cdc2. Cyclin B-bound inactive cdc2 (pre-MPF) was present only in immature Xenopus oocytes. Cdc2-cyclin B complex was, however, found in mature oocytes from all the species examined. After the oocyte is induced to mature by MIH, cdc2 should therefore bind to cyclin B in all of these species, except Xenopus. These results suggest that the complex formation of cdc2 and cyclin B in response to MIH stimulation at the oocyte surface is a critical step for initiating oocyte maturation in fishes and amphibians, with the exception of Xenopus, in which pre-MPF already exists in immature oocytes and only its chemical modification is required for MPF activation.
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