Abstract

The resumption of the meiotic cycle (maturation) induced by 1-methyladenine in prophase-arrested starfish oocytes is indicated by the breakdown of the germinal vesicle and is characterized by the increased sensitivity of the Ca2+ stores to inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) to InsP3 starting at the animal hemisphere (where the germinal vesicle was originally located) and propagating along the animal/vegetal axis of the oocyte. This initiates Ca2+ signals around the germinal vesicle before nuclear envelope breakdown. Previous studies have suggested that the final activation of the maturation-promoting factor (MPF), a cyclin-dependent kinase, which is the major element controlling the entry of eukaryotic cells into the M phase, occurs in the nucleus. MPF is then exported to the cytoplasm where its activity is autocatalytically amplified following a similar animal/vegetal spatial pattern. We have investigated whether activated MPF was involved in the increased sensitivity of the Ca2+ response to InsP3. We have found that the development of increased sensitivity of the Ca2+ stores to InsP3 receptors together with the Ca2+ signals in the perinuclear region was blocked in oocytes treated with the specific MPF inhibitor roscovitine. That the nuclear MPF activation is indeed required for changes of the InsP3 receptors sensitivity was shown by enucleating or by dissecting oocytes into vegetal and animal hemispheres prior to the addition of 1-MA. MPF activity 50 min after 1-methyladenine addition was much lower in the enucleated oocytes and in the vegetal hemisphere, which did not contain the germinal vesicle, as compared with the animal hemisphere, which did contain it. The Ca2+ increase induced by InsP3 under these experimental conditions correlated with the changes in actin cytoskeleton induced by MPF.

Highlights

  • The resumption of the meiotic cycle induced by 1-methyladenine in prophase-arrested starfish oocytes is indicated by the breakdown of the germinal vesicle and is characterized by the increased sensitivity of the Ca2؉ stores to inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) to InsP3 starting at the animal hemisphere and propagating along the animal/vegetal axis of the oocyte

  • Previous studies have suggested that the final activation of the maturation-promoting factor (MPF), a cyclin-dependent kinase, which is the major element controlling the entry of eukaryotic cells into the M phase, occurs in the nucleus

  • We have found that the development of increased sensitivity of the Ca2؉ stores to InsP3 receptors together with the Ca2؉ signals in the perinuclear region was blocked in oocytes treated with the specific MPF inhibitor roscovitine

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

1-MA, 1-methyladenine; GVBD, germinal vesicle breakdown; BAPTA, 1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethaneN,N,NЈ,NЈ-tetraacetic acid tetrakis; MPF, maturation-promoting factor; InsP3, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate; OGBD, Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1, coupled to a 70-kDa dextran; CCD, charge-coupled device; RHD, rhodamine dextran 70,000; Lat-A, latrunculin-A; TBS, Tris-buffered saline; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; CaM, calmodulin. Phosphorylation on Thr-161 is a prerequisite for the activation of CDK1/cyclin B [6], it is activated after dephosphorylation on Thr-14 and Tyr-15 by cdc dual-specificity phosphatase [7,8,9] The latter is in turn activated by a phosphorylation kinase through a calcium/calmodulin-dependent step [10]. The response of Ca2ϩ stores to InsP3 has been shown to increase during oocyte maturation, so that more calcium is released when InsP3 is injected into a mature oocyte [17]. The finding that Ca2ϩ signaling initiates in the perinuclear area suggested the involvement of nuclear-produced factors, in line with the finding that the response of oocytes to InsP3 prior to GVBD was strongly affected by the removal of the germinal vesicle [19]. The experiments with MPF inhibitor roscovitine described here support the indication and suggest that the increased sensitivity of the Ca2ϩ stores to InsP3 is mediated by actin cytoskeleton changes

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