Cargando…

Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules

BACKGROUND: Oocyte cortical granules are important in the fertilization of numerous species including mammals. Relatively little is known about the composition, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mammalian oocyte cortical granules. RESULTS: Results obtained with confocal scanning laser micr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Liu, Min, Sims, DeAndrea, Calarco, Patricia, Talbot, Prue
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC305340/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14613547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7827-1-77
_version_ 1782121097311813632
author Liu, Min
Sims, DeAndrea
Calarco, Patricia
Talbot, Prue
author_facet Liu, Min
Sims, DeAndrea
Calarco, Patricia
Talbot, Prue
author_sort Liu, Min
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Oocyte cortical granules are important in the fertilization of numerous species including mammals. Relatively little is known about the composition, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mammalian oocyte cortical granules. RESULTS: Results obtained with confocal scanning laser microscopy indicated that mouse oocytes have at least two populations of cortical granules, one that bound both the lectin LCA and the antibody ABL2 and one that bound only LCA. Both types of granules were synthesized at the same time during oocyte maturation suggesting that the ABL2 antigen is targeted to specific granules by a sorting sequence. The distribution of both populations of cortical granules was then studied during the germinal vesicle to metaphase II transition. As the oocytes entered metaphase I, the first cortical granule free domain, which was devoid of both populations of cortical granules, formed over the spindle. During first polar body extrusion, a subpopulation of LCA-binding granules became concentrated in the cleavage furrow and underwent exocytosis prior to fertilization. Granules that bound ABL2 were not exocytosed at this time. Much of the LCA-binding exudate from the release at the cleavage furrow was retained in the perivitelline space near the region of exocytosis and was deduced to contain at least three polypeptides with approximate molecular weights of 90, 62, and 56 kDa. A second cortical granule free domain developed following pre-fertilization exocytosis and subsequently continued to increase in area as both, LCA and LCA/ ABL2-binding granules near the spindle became redistributed toward the equator of the oocyte. The pre-fertilization release of cortical granules did not affect binding of sperm to the overlying zona pellucida. CONCLUSIONS: Our data show that mouse oocytes contain at least two populations of cortical granules and that a subset of LCA-binding cortical granules is released at a specific time (during extrusion of the first polar body) and place (around the cleavage furrow) prior to fertilization. The observations indicate that the functions of the cortical granules are more complex than previously realized and include events occurring prior to gamete membrane fusion.
format Text
id pubmed-305340
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2003
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-3053402004-01-01 Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules Liu, Min Sims, DeAndrea Calarco, Patricia Talbot, Prue Reprod Biol Endocrinol Research BACKGROUND: Oocyte cortical granules are important in the fertilization of numerous species including mammals. Relatively little is known about the composition, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mammalian oocyte cortical granules. RESULTS: Results obtained with confocal scanning laser microscopy indicated that mouse oocytes have at least two populations of cortical granules, one that bound both the lectin LCA and the antibody ABL2 and one that bound only LCA. Both types of granules were synthesized at the same time during oocyte maturation suggesting that the ABL2 antigen is targeted to specific granules by a sorting sequence. The distribution of both populations of cortical granules was then studied during the germinal vesicle to metaphase II transition. As the oocytes entered metaphase I, the first cortical granule free domain, which was devoid of both populations of cortical granules, formed over the spindle. During first polar body extrusion, a subpopulation of LCA-binding granules became concentrated in the cleavage furrow and underwent exocytosis prior to fertilization. Granules that bound ABL2 were not exocytosed at this time. Much of the LCA-binding exudate from the release at the cleavage furrow was retained in the perivitelline space near the region of exocytosis and was deduced to contain at least three polypeptides with approximate molecular weights of 90, 62, and 56 kDa. A second cortical granule free domain developed following pre-fertilization exocytosis and subsequently continued to increase in area as both, LCA and LCA/ ABL2-binding granules near the spindle became redistributed toward the equator of the oocyte. The pre-fertilization release of cortical granules did not affect binding of sperm to the overlying zona pellucida. CONCLUSIONS: Our data show that mouse oocytes contain at least two populations of cortical granules and that a subset of LCA-binding cortical granules is released at a specific time (during extrusion of the first polar body) and place (around the cleavage furrow) prior to fertilization. The observations indicate that the functions of the cortical granules are more complex than previously realized and include events occurring prior to gamete membrane fusion. BioMed Central 2003-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC305340/ /pubmed/14613547 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7827-1-77 Text en Copyright © 2003 Liu et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Research
Liu, Min
Sims, DeAndrea
Calarco, Patricia
Talbot, Prue
Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules
title Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules
title_full Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules
title_fullStr Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules
title_full_unstemmed Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules
title_short Biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules
title_sort biochemical heterogeneity, migration, and pre-fertilization release of mouse oocyte cortical granules
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC305340/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14613547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7827-1-77
work_keys_str_mv AT liumin biochemicalheterogeneitymigrationandprefertilizationreleaseofmouseoocytecorticalgranules
AT simsdeandrea biochemicalheterogeneitymigrationandprefertilizationreleaseofmouseoocytecorticalgranules
AT calarcopatricia biochemicalheterogeneitymigrationandprefertilizationreleaseofmouseoocytecorticalgranules
AT talbotprue biochemicalheterogeneitymigrationandprefertilizationreleaseofmouseoocytecorticalgranules