Abstract

Injection of eggs of various species with an extract of sperm cytoplasm stimulates intracellular Ca(2+) release that is spatially and temporally like that occurring at fertilization, suggesting that Ca(2+) release at fertilization may be initiated by a soluble factor from the sperm. Here we investigate whether the signalling pathway that leads to Ca(2+) release in response to sperm extract injection requires the same signal transduction molecules as are required at fertilization. Eggs of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis were injected with the Src-homology 2 domains of phospholipase C gamma or of the Src family kinase Fyn (which act as specific dominant negative inhibitors of the activation of these enzymes), and the effects on Ca(2+) release at fertilization or in response to injection of a sperm extract were compared. Our findings indicate that both fertilization and sperm extract injection initiate Ca(2+) release by a pathway requiring phospholipase C gamma and a Src family kinase. These results support the hypothesis that, in ascidians, a soluble factor from the sperm cytoplasm initiates Ca(2+) release at fertilization, and indicate that the activating factor from the sperm may be a regulator, directly or indirectly, of a Src family kinase in the egg.

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