Abstract

Protein phosphorylation was studied during fertilization of Urechis caupo oocytes both in vivo, by measuring [ 32P]phosphate incorporation into 32P preloaded oocytes and in vitro, by measuring endogenous protein kinase and phosphatase activities in homogenates. During fertilization (and maturation) the rate of protein phosphorylation is dramatically increased. No change in the [ 32P]phosphate uptake, or the nucleotide levels was observed at fertilization, so the increase cannot be attributed to changes in substrate availability. In vitro enzyme assays showed changes in protein kinase activity which approximately mirrored the changes in the in vivo phosphorylation pattern. As there were no changes in protein phosphatase activity, these results suggest the phosphorylation change results from an increase in protein kinase activity. The pattern of change, investigated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, shows that proteins that were phosphorylated in the unfertilized egg become phosphorylated to a greater degree after fertilization. One protein (48 kd) undergoes an increase followed by a decrease of its phosphorylation level.

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