Abstract

Mature amphibian eggs arrested at meiotic metaphase II must undergo activation to initiate embryonic development soon after fertilization. Fertilizing sperm provide eggs with a signal that induces egg activation, and an increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration in the egg cytoplasm (a Ca2+ rise) is the most important signal for this initiation. The sperm transmits the signal for the Ca2+ rise, known as the sperm factor, which is divergent between anurans and urodeles. In monospermic anurans, the sperm transmits the signal through a receptor on the egg membrane, causing a single rapid Ca2+ rise. Sperm matrix metalloproteinase-2 is a potential candidate for the receptor-mediated sperm factor in anurans. In physiologically polyspermic urodeles, multiple slower Ca2+ rises are caused by a soluble sperm factor (sperm-specific citrate synthase) which is transferred to the egg cytoplasm after sperm-egg fusion. We discuss the molecular mechanisms of egg activation in amphibian fertilization, focusing on recent progress in characterizing these sperm factors and their divergence during the evolution of tetrapod vertebrates.

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