|
|
||||||||
Biology of Reproduction, Vol 57, 85-91, Copyright © 1997 by Society for the Study of Reproduction
ARTICLES |
Z Machaty, MA Mayes, LG Kovacs, PA Balatti, JH Kim and RS Prather
Department of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, 65211, USA.
Thirty hours after the beginning of in vitro maturation, porcine oocytes were microinjected with mRNA coding for the rat muscarinic M1 receptor. They were then incubated for 15 h to allow sufficient time for completing maturation, translation of the mRNA, and insertion of the receptor into the plasma membrane. They were then treated with acetylcholine, the receptor's agonist, and its effect on inducing various activation-related changes was examined. Acetylcholine treatment triggered the release of Ca2+ from internal stores that could be blocked by atropine, the receptor's antagonist. The Ca2+ release was probably mediated via a G protein, since prior injection of guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP-beta-S) totally inhibited the effect of the agonist. Pertussis toxin (PT) had no effect on the Ca2+ transients induced by acetylcholine, suggesting that the signal transduction pathway involved a PT-insensitive G protein. Electron microscopy revealed that in the injected oocytes, acetylcholine induced cortical granule exocytosis. The oocytes were released from meiotic arrest as evidenced by the decrease in H1 kinase activity measured in the oocytes during the histone H1 kinase assay. After resuming meiosis they entered interphase: 58.8% of the injected oocytes formed pronuclei after incubation with the agonist. Injection without subsequent acetylcholine treatment, or acetylcholine incubation without prior injection with the receptor mRNA, did not cause these changes. The results provide further evidence that the components of a G protein-mediated signal transduction pathway exist in porcine oocytes and that the activation of this pathway via an exogenously supplied G protein-coupled receptor results in a full complement of oocyte activation events. Whether this pathway transduces the activating signal at sperm-induced oocyte activation requires further examination.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
Z. Machaty, J. J. Ramsoondar, A. J. Bonk, K. R. Bondioli, and R. S. Prather Capacitative Calcium Entry Mechanism in Porcine Oocytes Biol Reprod, March 1, 2002; 66(3): 667 - 674. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. D. Campbell, W. A. Reed, and K. L. White Ability of Integrins to Mediate Fertilization, Intracellular Calcium Release, and Parthenogenetic Development in Bovine Oocytes Biol Reprod, June 1, 2000; 62(6): 1702 - 1709. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
![]() |
J.-H. Kim, H.-J. Do, W.-H. Wang, Z. Macháty, Y.-M. Han, B. N. Day, and R. S. Prather A Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Inhibitor, Sodium Orthovanadate, Causes Parthenogenetic Activation of Pig Oocytes via an Increase in Protein Tyrosine Kinase Activity Biol Reprod, October 1, 1999; 61(4): 900 - 905. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
![]() |
J.-H. Kim, Z. Macháty, R. A. Cabot, Y.-M. Han, H.-J. Do, and R. S. Prather Development of Pig Oocytes Activated by Stimulation of an Exogenous G Protein-Coupled Receptor Biol Reprod, July 1, 1998; 59(3): 655 - 660. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |