Abstract
After ∼7-40 s following gamete fusion, a steadily increasing fraction of a sea urchin's zygotes initiate an activating calcium wave. The fertilization membrane then rises, the cell cycle resumes and development begins. This study focuses on the so-called latent period that occurs between the time that gamete fusion occurs and the initiation of the activating calcium wave. We inhibited calcium influx during this period by adding lanthanum or by reducing external calcium with a buffer at various time points after insemination. Both of these treatments blocked the activation of eggs that had not yet started a wave at the time of treatment. This indicates that an influx of calcium is needed during the latent period to induce egg activation. These results support the sperm conduit model of egg activation in the sea urchin, where calcium flows from the sea through the fused sperms' acrosomal process into a cortical region of the eggs' endoplasmic reticulum.
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