Weak bases partially activate Xenopus eggs and permit changes in membrane conductance whilst inhibiting cortical granule exocytosis

1987 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-220
Author(s):  
M. Charbonneau ◽  
D.J. Webb

At extracellular pH values close to their pKa values the weak bases, ammonia and procaine, elicited a series of events in non-activated Xenopus eggs, some of which resembled those normally occurring at fertilization. These included: (1) a transient increase in membrane conductance; (2) modification of the microvilli; (3) thickening of the cortical cytoplasm and displacement of the cortical granules; (4) pigment accumulation; (5) contractions and shape changes. However, these eggs did not undergo the cortical reaction nor emit the second polar body. Cortical granule exocytosis of inseminated or artificially stimulated eggs was inhibited if the eggs had been previously treated for 15 min with the weak base and subsequently rinsed. Multiple sperm-entry sites were exhibited by the inseminated eggs, suggesting polyspermy. However, such eggs did not cleave and although sperm had fused with the egg membrane, they were not incorporated. Nevertheless, a transient increase in membrane conductance was evoked, which was longer in duration and had a slightly different form from that normally accompanying fertilization. In these eggs cortical granules were intact but displaced away from the plasma membrane. Prolonged contact with the weak base rendered eggs totally unresponsive to sperm or artificial stimuli but eggs recovered when rinsed sufficiently. These effects of weak bases on unfertilized Xenopus eggs or during fertilization were completely absent at pH 7.4. Although changes in intracellular pH or Ca2+ may be involved in these phenomena, direct action by the weak base itself cannot be ruled out.

1996 ◽  
Vol 134 (2) ◽  
pp. 329-338 ◽  
Author(s):  
S S Vogel ◽  
P S Blank ◽  
J Zimmerberg

We have investigated the consequences of having multiple fusion complexes on exocytotic granules, and have identified a new principle for interpreting the calcium dependence of calcium-triggered exocytosis. Strikingly different physiological responses to calcium are expected when active fusion complexes are distributed between granules in a deterministic or probabilistic manner. We have modeled these differences, and compared them with the calcium dependence of sea urchin egg cortical granule exocytosis. From the calcium dependence of cortical granule exocytosis, and from the exposure time and concentration dependence of N-ethylmaleimide inhibition, we determined that cortical granules do have spare active fusion complexes that are randomly distributed as a Poisson process among the population of granules. At high calcium concentrations, docking sites have on average nine active fusion complexes.


1995 ◽  
Vol 108 (6) ◽  
pp. 2293-2300 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Terasaki

A Ca2+ wave at fertilization triggers cortical granule exocytosis in sea urchin eggs. New methods for visualizing exocytosis of individual cortical granules were developed using fluorescent probes and confocal microscopy. Electron microscopy previously provided evidence that cortical granule exocytosis results in the formation of long-lived depressions in the cell surface. Fluorescent dextran or ovalbumin in the sea water seemed to label these depressions and appeared by confocal microscopy as disks. FM 1–43, a water-soluble fluorescent dye which labels membranes in contact with the sea water, seemed to label the membrane of these depressions and appeared as rings. In double-labeling experiments, the disk and ring labeling by the two types of fluorescent dyes were coincident to within 0.5 second. The fluorescent labeling is coincident with the disappearance of cortical granules by transmitted light microscopy, demonstrating that the labeling corresponds to cortical granule exocytosis. Fluorescent labeling was simultaneous with an expansion of the space occupied by the cortical granule, and labeling by the fluorescent dextran was found to take 0.1-0.2 second. These results are consistent with, and reinforce the previous electron microscopic evidence for, long-lived depressions formed by exocytosis; in addition, the new methods provide new ways to investigate cortical granule exocytosis in living eggs. The fluorescence labeling methods were used with the Ca2+ indicator Ca Green-dextran to test if Ca2+ and cortical granule exocytosis are closely related spatially and temporally. In any given region of the cortex, Ca2+ increased relatively slowly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Development ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 947-956 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.Z. Sun ◽  
J. Hoyland ◽  
X. Huang ◽  
W. Mason ◽  
R.M. Moor

The experiments compare intracellular changes in porcine eggs induced by electrical activation with those induced by sperm penetration. Adequate electrostimulation induces changes in both cortical granule exocytosis and protein synthesis similar to those induced by sperm during fertilization. However, ionic changes induced by electrostimulation differ markedly from those initiated at fertilization. Thus, dynamic video imaging using Fura-2 as a Ca2+ probe provides evidence that parthenogenetic activation induced by electrostimulation is initiated by a single sharp rise in the concentration of intracellular free calcium ([Ca2+]i) in the egg. The intracellular Ca2+ transient increase is triggered by an influx of extracellular Ca2+ immediately after electrostimulation. The amplitude of the intracellular Ca2+ transient increase is a function both of the extracellular Ca2+ concentration and of electric field parameters (field strength and pulse duration). Imaging demonstrates further that a single electrical pulse can only induce a single Ca2+ transient which usually lasts three to five minutes; no further Ca2+ transients are observed unless additional electrical stimuli are applied. By contrast, sperm-induced activation is characterised by a series of Ca2+ spikes which continue for at least 3 hours after sperm-egg fusion. The pattern of Ca2+ spiking after fertilization is not consistent during this period but changes both in frequency and amplitude. Overall, the results demonstrate that, although electrostimulation induces both cortical granule exocytosis and protein reprogramming in porcine eggs, it does not reproduce the pattern of [Ca2+]i changes induced by sperm entry at fertilization.


1985 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 1325-1329 ◽  
Author(s):  
W B Busa ◽  
R Nuccitelli

The eggs of most or all animals are thought to be activated after fertilization by a transient increase in free cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). We have applied Ca2+-selective microelectrodes to detect such an increase in fertilized eggs of the frog, Xenopus laevis. As observed with an electrode in the animal hemisphere, [Ca2+]i increased from 0.4 to 1.2 microM over the course of 2 min after fertilization, and returned to its original value during the next 10 min. No further changes in [Ca2+]i were detected through the first cleavage division. In eggs impaled with two Ca2+ electrodes, the Ca2+ pulse was observed to travel as a wave from the animal to the vegetal hemisphere, propagating at a rate of approximately 10 microns/s across the animal hemisphere. The apparent delay between the start of the fertilization potential and initiation of the Ca2+ wave at the sperm entry site as approximately 1 min. Through these observations describe only the behavior of subcortical [Ca2+]i, we suggest that our data represent the subcortical extension of the cortical Ca2+ wave thought to trigger cortical granule exocytosis, and we present evidence that both the timing and magnitude of the Ca2+ pulse we observed are consistent with this identity. This first quantification of subcortical [Ca2+]i during fertilization indicates that the Ca2+ transient is available to regulate processes (e.g., protein synthesis) in the subcortical cytosol.


2002 ◽  
Vol 115 (6) ◽  
pp. 1313-1320
Author(s):  
Cameron B. Gundersen ◽  
Sirus A. Kohan ◽  
Qian Chen ◽  
Joseph Iagnemma ◽  
Joy A. Umbach

Previous work has shown that phorbol esters or diacylglycerol trigger cortical granule exocytosis in Xenopus oocytes. We sought to identify the isoform(s) of protein kinase C (PKC) that mediate(s) this regulated secretory event. Because this process is initiated by lipid activators of PKC but is independent of calcium ions, we focused on the family of novel(calcium-independent) PKCs. Pharmacological investigations using Gö6976 and Gö6983 tended to exclude PKCδ, ϵ and μ as secretory triggers. Subcellular fractionation and immunoblot data revealed that these oocytes expressed all five members of the novel PKC family, but it was only PKCη that colocalized with cortical granules. Finally, expression of wild type or constitutively active forms of PKCδ and η strongly supported the conclusion that it is PKCη that initiates cortical granule exocytosis in these cells. These observations represent an important step in identifying the mechanism of secretory triggering in this system.


Zygote ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Matese ◽  
David R. McClay

SummaryIn sea urchin eggs, fertilisation is followed by a calcium wave, cortical granule exocytosis and fertilisation envelope elevation. Both the calcium wave and cortical granule exocytosis sweep across the egg in a wave initiated at the point of sperm entry. Using differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy combined with laser scanning confocal microscopy, populations of cortical granules undergoing calcium-induced exocytosis were observed in living urchin eggs. Calcium imaging using the indicator Calcium Green-dextran was combined with an image subtraction technique for visual isolation of individual exocytotic events. Relative fluorescence levels of the calcium indicator during the fertilisation wave were compared with cortical fusion events. In localised regions of the egg, there is a 6s delay between the detection of calcium release and fusion of cortical granules. The rate of calcium accumulation was altered experimentally to ask whether this delay was necessary to achieve a threshold concentration of calcium to trigger fusion, or was a time-dependent activation of the cortical granule fusion apparatus after the ‘triggering’ event. Calcium release rate was attenuated by blocking inositol 1,4,5-triphospate (InsP3)-gated channels with heparin. Heparin extended the time necessary to achieve a minimum concentration of calcium at the sites of cortical granule exocytosis. The data are consistent with the conclusion that much of the delay observed normally is necessary to reach threshold concentration of calcium. Cortical granules then fuse with the plasma membrane. Further, once the minimum threshold calcium concentration is reached, cortical granule fusion with the plasma membrane occurs in a pattern suggesting that cortical granules are non-uniform in their calcium sensitivity threshold.


1989 ◽  
Vol 109 (3) ◽  
pp. 1269-1278 ◽  
Author(s):  
D E Chandler ◽  
M Whitaker ◽  
J Zimmerberg

Recently, we have shown that high molecular weight polymers inhibit cortical granule exocytosis at total osmolalities only slightly higher than that of sea water (Whitaker, M., and J. Zimmerberg. 1987. J. Physiol. 389:527-539). In this study, we visualize the step at which this inhibition occurs. Lytechinus pictus and Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs were exposed to 0.8 M stachyose or 40% (wt/vol) dextran (average molecular mass of 10 kD) in artificial sea water, activated with 60 microM of the calcium ionophore A23187, and then either fixed with glutaraldehyde and embedded or quick-frozen and freeze-fractured. Stachyose (2.6 osmol/kg) appears to inhibit cortical granule exocytosis by eliciting formation of a granule-free zone (GFZ) in the egg cortex which pushes granules away from the plasma membrane thus preventing their fusion. In contrast, 40% dextran (1.58 osmol/kg) does not result in a GFZ and cortical granules undergo fusion. In some specimens, the pores joining granule and plasma membranes are relatively small; in other cases, the exocytotic pocket has been stabilized in an omega configuration and the granule matrix remains intact. These observations suggest that high molecular weight polymers block exocytosis because of their inability to enter the granule matrix: they retard the water entry that is needed for matrix dispersal.


2016 ◽  
Vol 347 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar Daniel Bello ◽  
Andrea Isabel Cappa ◽  
Matilde de Paola ◽  
María Natalia Zanetti ◽  
Mitsunori Fukuda ◽  
...  

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