zygote nucleus
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2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gareth Bloomfield ◽  
Peggy Paschke ◽  
Marina Okamoto ◽  
Tim J. Stevens ◽  
Hideko Urushihara

AbstractSex promotes the recombination and reassortment of genetic material and is prevalent across eukaryotes. In social amoebae sex involves a promiscuous mixing of cytoplasm before zygotes consume the majority of cells. We report here the first genomewide characterisation of meiotic progeny in Dictyostelium discoideum. We find that recombination occurs at high frequency in pairwise crosses between all three mating types, despite the absence of the SPO11 enzyme that is normally required to initiate crossover formation. In crosses involving three strains, transient fusions involving more than two gametes frequently lead to triparental inheritance, with recombined nuclear haplotypes inherited from two parents and the mitochondrial genome from a third. Cells that do not contribute genetically to the Dictyostelium zygote nucleus thereby have a stake in the next haploid generation. We suggest that this lateral transfer helps to enforce cooperation in this confictual system.



Zygote ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Urszula Stępińska ◽  
Bożenna Olszańska

During polyspermic fertilisation in birds numerous spermatozoa enter the eggs, in contrast to the situation in mammals where fertilisation is monospermic. However, in birds only one of the spermatozoa which have entered an egg participates in zygote nucleus formation, while the supernumerary spermatozoa degenerate at early embryogenesis. Our previous work has demonstrated the presence in preovulatory quail oocytes of DNase I and II activities able to digest naked λDNA/HindIII substrate in vitro. In the present studies, the activities of both DNases in quail oocytes at different stages of oogenesis and in ovulated mouse oocytes were assayed in vitro using the same substrate. Degradation of quail spermatozoa by quail oocyte extracts was also checked. Digestion of the DNA substrate was evaluated by electrophoresis on agarose gels. The activities of DNase I and II in quail oocytes increased during oogenesis and were the highest in mature oocytes. The activities were present not only in germinal discs but also in a thin layer of cytoplasm adhering to the perivitelline layer surrounding the yolk. At all stages of oogenesis the activity of DNase II was much higher than that of DNase I. DNA contained in spermatozoa was also degraded by the quail oocyte extracts under conditions optimal for both DNases. In contrast to what is observed in quail oocytes, no DNase activities were detected in ovulated mouse eggs; this is logical as they would be useless or even harmful in monospermic fertilisation. The possible role of DNase activities in avian oocytes, in degradation of accessory spermatozoa during polyspermic fertilisation, is discussed.



2001 ◽  
Vol 231 (2) ◽  
pp. 383-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Loppin ◽  
Frédéric Berger ◽  
Pierre Couble


1999 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 3003-3014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Maercker ◽  
Heike Kortwig ◽  
Mikhail A. Nikiforov ◽  
C. David Allis ◽  
Hans J. Lipps

Ciliates are unicellular eukaryotic organisms containing two types of nuclei: macronuclei and micronuclei. After the sexual pathway takes place, a new macronucleus is formed from a zygote nucleus, whereas the old macronucleus is degraded and resorbed. In the course of macronuclear differentiation, polytene chromosomes are synthesized that become degraded again after some hours. Most of the DNA is eliminated, and the remaining DNA is fragmented into small DNA molecules that are amplified to a high copy number in the new macronucleus. The protein Pdd1p (programmed DNA degradation protein 1) fromTetrahymena has been shown to be present in macronuclear anlagen in the DNA degradation stage and also in the old macronuclei, which are resorbed during the formation of the new macronucleus. In this study the identification and localization of a Pdd1p homologous protein in Stylonychia (Spdd1p) is described. Spdd1p is localized in the precursor nuclei in the DNA elimination stage and in the old macronuclei during their degradation, but also in macronuclei and micronuclei of starved cells. In all of these nuclei, apoptotic-like DNA breakdown was detected. These data suggest that Spdd1p is a general factor involved in programmed DNA degradation inStylonychia.



Author(s):  
Heide Schatten ◽  
Amitabha Chakrabarti

In most animal systems, microtubules are nucleated and organized by centrosomes which undergo considerable modifications during the cell cycle. Typically, centrosomes are phoshorylated at the transition from interphase to mitosis as shown with MPM2, an antibody directed against phosphoproteins. Using the MPM2 antibody, we show in this paper with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and immunofluorescence microscopy (IFM) that in the sea urchin system centrosomes are phosphorylated in the sperm before fertilization and at every stage of the first cell cycle. MPM2 exhibits identical staining patterns as Ah-6 and 5051 previously shown to reliably identify centrosomal material in sea urchin cells. After centrosomal material is brought into the egg by the sperm, it spreads around the zygote nucleus where it gets distributed and becomes bipolar and compacted to form the mitotic apparatus. Typically, at these mitotic stages, centrosomal material exhibits the brightest staining with MPM2, Ah-6 and 5051 Since in this system phoshorylated centrosomal material is contributed by the sperm, the egg's competence for centrosome phosphorylation was analyzed by activating centrosomal material in the unfertilized egg by treatment with either A23187, ammonia, D2O, or taxol.



Development ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Houliston ◽  
D. Carre ◽  
J. A. Johnston ◽  
C. Sardet

The single axis (oral-aboral) and two planes of symmetry of the ctenophore Beroe ovata become established with respect to the position of zygote nucleus formation and the orientation of first cleavage. Bisection of Beroe eggs at different times revealed that differences in egg organisation are established in relation to the presumptive oral-aboral axis before first cleavage. Lateral fragments produced after but not before the time of first mitosis developed into larvae lacking comb-plates on one side. Time-lapse video demonstrated that waves of cytoplasmic reorganisation spread through the layer of peripheral cytoplasm (ectoplasm) of the egg during the 80 minute period between pronuclear fusion and first cleavage, along the future oral-aboral axis. These waves are manifest as the progressive displacement and dispersal of plaques of accumulated organelles around supernumerary sperm nuclei, and a series of surface movements. Their timing and direction of propagation suggest they may be involved in establishing cytoplasmic differences with respect to the embryonic axis. Inhibitor experiments suggested that the observed cytoplasmic reorganisation involves microtubules. Nocodazole and taxol, which prevent microtubule turnover, blocked plaque dispersal and reduced surface movements. The microfilament-disrupting drug cytochalasin B did not prevent plaque dispersal but induced abnormal surface contractions. We examined changes in microtubule organisation using immunofluorescence on eggs fixed at different times and in live eggs following injection of rhodamine-tubulin. Giant microtubule asters become associated with each male pronucleus after the end of meiosis. Following pronuclear fusion they disappear successively, those nearest the zygote nucleus shrinking first, to establish gradients of aster size within single eggs. Regional differences in microtubule behaviour around the time of mitosis were revealed by brief taxol treatment, which induced the formation of small microtubule asters in the region of the nucleus or spindle during both first and second cell cycles. The observed wave of change may thus reflect the local appearance and spreading of mitotic activity as the zygote nucleus approaches mitosis.



1991 ◽  
Vol 114 (5) ◽  
pp. 929-940 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Terasaki ◽  
L A Jaffe

The ER of eggs of the sea urchin Lytechinus pictus was stained by microinjecting a saturated solution of the fluorescent dicarbocyanine DiIC18(3) (DiI) in soybean oil; the dye spread from the oil drop into ER membranes throughout the egg but not into other organelles. Confocal microscopy revealed large cisternae extending throughout the interior of the egg and a tubular membrane network at the cortex. Since diffusion of DiI is confined to continuous bilayers, the spread of the dye supports the concept that the ER is a cell-wide, interconnected compartment. In time lapse observations, the internal cisternae were seen to be in continuous motion, while the cortical ER was stationary. After fertilization, the internal ER appeared to become more finely divided, beginning as a wave apparently coincident with the calcium wave and becoming most marked by 2-3 min. By 5-8 min the ER returned to an organization similar to that of the unfertilized egg. The cortical network also changed at fertilization; it became disrupted and eventually recovered. DiI labeling allowed continuous observations of the ER during pronuclear migration and mitosis. DiI-stained membranes accumulated in the region of the microtubule array surrounding the sperm nucleus and centriole (the sperm aster) as it migrated to the center of the egg; this accumulation persisted near the centrosomes and zygote nucleus throughout pronuclear fusion and the first two mitotic cycles. We have used a new method to observe the spatial and temporal organization of the ER in a living cell, and we have demonstrated a striking reorganization of the ER at fertilization.





Development ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-299 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.R. Franks ◽  
B.R. Hough-Evans ◽  
R.J. Britten ◽  
E.H. Davidson

A method is described for microinjection of cloned DNA into the zygote nucleus of Lytechinus variegatus. Eggs of this species are unusually transparent, facilitating visual monitoring of the injection process. The initial fate of injected DNA fragments appears similar to that observed earlier for exogenous DNA injected into unfertilized egg cytoplasm. Thus after end-to-end ligation, it is replicated after a lag of several hours to an extent indicating that it probably participates in most of the later rounds of DNA synthesis undergone by the host cell genomes during cleavage. The different consequences of nuclear versus cytoplasmic injection are evident at advanced larval stages. Larvae descendant from eggs in which exogenous DNA was injected into the nuclei are four times more likely (32% versus 8%) to retain this DNA in cell lineages that replicate very extensively during larval growth, i.e. the lineages contributing to the imaginal rudiment, and thus to display greatly enhanced contents of the exogenous DNA. Similarly, 36% of postmetamorphic juveniles from a nuclear injection sample retained the exogenous DNA sequences, compared to 12% of juveniles from a cytoplasmic injection sample. However, the number of copies of the exogenous DNA sequences retained per average genome in postmetamorphic juveniles was usually less than 0.1 (range 0.05-50), and genome blot hybridizations indicate that these sequences are organized as integrated, randomly oriented, end-to-end molecular concatenates. It follows that only a small fraction of the cells of the average juvenile usually retains the exogenous sequences. Thus, even when introduced by nuclear microinjection, the stable incorporation of exogenous DNA in the embryo occurs in a mosaic fashion, although in many recipients the DNA enters a wider range of cell lineages than is typical after cytoplasmic injection. Nuclear injection would probably be the route of choice for studies of exogenous DNA function in the postembryonic larval rudiment.



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