Department of Molecular and Cell Biology & Biochemistry, 69 Brown Street, Box G, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: rhet{at}brown.edu)
Accepted 13 June 2002
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Meiosis, Cortical granule, Microfilaments, Endocytosis, cAMP, Oocyte maturation, Sea urchin
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INTRODUCTION |
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The contents of cortical granules in frogs and sea urchins have been well studied and are found to contain a diverse repertoire of molecules that includes enzymes, structural proteins and glycosaminoglycans (Wessel et al., 2001). Once secreted, these molecules mix with the nascent vitelline layer of the egg and lift it from the cell surface to form a proteinaceous envelope. In mammals, the contents of cortical granules are not as well understood, but they too modify the oocyte extracellular matrix, the zona pellucida, making it non-receptive to subsequent sperm. In general, cortical granules are synthesized throughout oogenesis, accumulating linearly, and are dispersed evenly throughout the cytoplasm of the cell. However, just prior to the resumption of meiosis, apparent by germinal vesicle (oocyte nucleus) breakdown, cortical granules translocate en masse to the cell surface where they dock to the plasma membrane (Berg and Wessel, 1997
).
While the stimulus for cortical granule translocation to the plasma membrane is not known in any animal, in sea urchins it does occur temporally coincident with the resumption of meiosis. A general indication of meiotic maturation is movement of the germinal vesicle to the oocyte surface, where it breaks down, and progresses through two rounds of meiotic reduction, resulting in two polar bodies and a haploid complement of chromosomes. Oocytes of most animals are halted at some point in meiosis (MII for frog and mouse, for example) and fertilization reinitiates the meiotic process and the exocytosis of cortical granules. In starfish, a close relative of sea urchins, oocytes are shed with an intact germinal vesicle and 1-methyladenine synthesized in the follicle cells reinitiates meiosis. These oocytes are usually fertilized in MII, and then complete meiosis. If these oocytes are not fertilized within 20 hours after completion of meiosis, they will die by apoptosis (Sasaki and Chiba, 2001; Yuce and Sadler, 2001
). By contrast, sea urchin oocytes complete meiosis in the ovary, and the haploid eggs are stored for prolonged periods in the ovarian lumen until induced to shed. Curiously, in sea urchins the cortical granules translocate to the cortex during meiotic maturation, yet they remain attached to the plasma membrane for days, or experimentally for months, without precocious secretion. Within seconds of insemination though, the entire population of cortical granules is secreted.
The process of meiotic maturation in sea urchins is recapitulated in vitro, although the stimulus to re-enter meiotic maturation is not known. Currently, to study changes at meiosis we rely on the spontaneous reactivation of meiosis in isolated oocytes (Berg and Wessel, 1997; Grainger et al., 1986
; Harvey, 1956
). The resumption of meiotic progression in this oocyte is indicated by the displacement of the germinal vesicle to the future animal pole of the cell. By this time,
40% of the cortical granules will have already translocated to the cortex (Berg and Wessel, 1997
). Thus, cortical granule translocation is an early indicator of meiotic resumption, or may even precede the stimulus for meiosis in this oocyte. As the oocyte is approximately 125 µm in diameter, this means that many of the cortical granules must migrate upwards of 60 µm, through an organelle-laden cytoplasm, to reach the cortex. We have identified several major features of cortical granule translocation. First, we characterized potential biochemical mechanisms used by sea urchin oocytes to initiate meiotic maturation. We were then able to learn that meiotic maturation and cortical granule translocation are inseparable, suggesting that they are each stimulated by the same biochemical pathway. Using cellular stratification approaches, we found that cortical granules are freely diffusible in the oocyte cytoplasm until meiosis. We also find that microfilaments provide the major pathway for cortical granule translocation to the cell cortex. In the future, these results will enable us to identify specific biochemical mechanisms that reactivate meiotic progression in the sea urchin oocyte, as well as the identification of the motive force for cortical granule translocation in this conserved process.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Reagents
The following chemical stocks were used: dibutyrl cAMP (DbcAMP) at 10 mg/ml in filtered artificial seawater (ASW; Instant Ocean, Aquarium Systems, Mentor, OH), isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX) at 50 mM (1.1 mg/ml in ASW), theophylline at 10 mg/ml in ASW, Okadeic acid at 10 µg/ml in DMSO, and 6-dimethylaminopurine (6-DMAP) and lithium chloride, each at 1.0 M in filtered ASW (all from Sigma Chemicals, St Louis, MO).
Cytoskeletal inhibitors were used at the following concentrations: nocodozole, 10 µg/ml; colchicine, 10 µM; cytochalasin B, 1 µg/ml; and cytochalasin D 1 µg/ml; 2 µM latrunculin A (Calbiochem) (Schatten et al., 1986) (all in ASW with 100 µg/ml ampicillin). In cases where DMSO was used for the solution vehicle, DMSO was tested alone at the same dilution and was found to have no effect in the assays used here.
The following reagents were each from LC Labs (Woburn, MA): roscovitine (cat R-1234; inhibitor of p34cdc2 in DMSO); olomoucine (cat O-3590; inhibitor of p34cdc2 in DMSO); forskolin (F-99229; activator of adenylate cyclase that leads to increased intracellular cAMP, in DMSO); Rp-cAMPS (A-9684; blocks cAMP-mediated signal transduction by inhibiting PKA, and resistant to hydrolysis by phophodiesterases, stock in water); H-8 (H-3660; blocks PKA (and some PKG) activity, in water); and H-89 (H-5239; an inhibitor of PKA, in DMSO).
Oocyte handling and labeling
For tracking maturation of single oocytes, a 96-well flexible assay plate (Becton Dickinson, Oxnard, CA) was used. For culturing populations of oocytes, either 7 mm depression glass multi-well plates (previously treated with GelSlick; AT Biochem, Malvern, PA) or polypropylene dishes (fashioned from beaker bottoms) were used and incubations were performed in humid chambers. Oocyte cultures routinely consisted of filtered ASW with ampicillin (100 µg/ml), which was replaced every 12 hours. For visualization of cortical granules, oocytes or eggs were fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde in ASW for 20-30 minutes. They were then extracted by ice cold 100% methanol for at least 10 minutes and washed in ASW containing 0.1% Tween-20 (ASW-Tw20). Storage prior to labeling was always at 4°C in ASW with ampicillin (100 µg/ml). Cortical granules were then immunolabeled and quantified as described elsewhere (Berg and Wessel, 1997). We note that when washing the oocytes/eggs, especially in the microtiter plate incubations of single cell cultures, it is better to replace the solution, than to move the oocyte.
For visualization of microfilaments, oocytes and eggs were fixed in freshly prepared 4% paraformaldehyde in Ca2+-free seawater (McClay, 1986) for 15 minutes, and then washed in ASW-Tw20. To label microfilaments, 3-5 µl Texas Red phalloidin (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oregon) was added to 100 µl ASW with 0.5% Tween-20 (ASW-Tw20) for at least 15 minutes and the cells were then visualized.
Oocyte stratification
Isolated oocytes were resuspended in 28% sucrose to give a final concentration of 16% sucrose and placed in a flat-bottom microfuge tubes. The cells were then spun in an Eppendorf microcentrifuge either at low speed (1500 g for 10 minutes), to partially displace the cortical granules, or high speed (5000 g for 10 minutes), to completely stratify the granules in the centrifugal pole. To measure cortical granule displacement, cells were prepared for immunolabeling (fixed in formaldehyde) immediately after centrifugation. Quantitation of cortical granules in stratified or recovered cells was also performed as above, using measurements in the centrifugal and centripetal hemispheres. Displacement (%) is then calculated as the difference of the two values (each oocyte value is an average of three readings) over the total value of the area measurements. Areas of the germinal vesicle were excluded from measurement. For experiments testing cytoskeletal function, cells were pre-incubated with cytoskeletal inhibitors (see above) for 10 minutes before centrifugation and/or immediately after centrifugation for a given period in ASW/ampicillin.
To measure cortical granule displacement during meiosis, oocyte cultures were examined hourly, and cells having undergone GVBD were removed and stratified. Because of the inability to synchronize oocyte GVBD, we were not able to stage the meiotic progression accurately, but we were able to examine 128 cells in these experiments.
Endocytosis assays
Isolated oocytes were incubated in FM1-43 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) at 1 µM. To evaluate endocytosis, oocytes were then visualized by confocal microscopy using a Zeiss LSM 410 and endocytic activity was assessed quantitatively as for cortical granule translocation (see above).
In situ RNA hybridization
Oocytes were hybridized for transcripts of cleavage stage histones as described previously (Berg and Wessel, 1997). Briefly, oocytes and eggs were fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde and prepared for whole mount in situ hybridization (Ransick et al., 1993
). Digoxigenin-labeled antisense transcripts were synthesized by first linearizing the tandemly-repeated histone clone (Holt and Childs, 1984
) that was subcloned into pBluescript (Stratagene, LaJolla CA) with NotI, and then transcribed using T7 RNA polymerase. Controls for these experiments included use of sense strands and non-relevant transcript probes.
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RESULTS |
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When oocytes mature in vitro, the resulting eggs sometimes have pronuclear abnormalities (Fig. 1). One aberration seen is that the resultant egg contains two pronuclei. These twin pronuclei are equal in size to the normal pronucleus of an egg, and are always adjacent to each other. This has been observed in normal shed eggs (at frequencies sometimes approaching 0.5%), but this phenotype is always greater in in vitro matured eggs, and can routinely reach frequencies as high as 18%. Although these eggs have not been followed developmentally, the nuclei appear normal based on their size, presence of a nuclear envelope and transcriptional activity, as judged by accumulation of transcripts encoding cleavage-stage histones (Fig. 1E). Transcription of these genes is silent in oocytes but is activated in the pronucleus after meiotic maturation (Venezky et al., 1981). Surprisingly, each of these twin pronuclei often contain increased signal for the histone transcript, perhaps indicating a diploid nucleus.
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To understand the mechanism that initiates and carries out cortical granule translocation, we attempted to manipulate meiotic maturation using a variety of reagents and assess the effect, if any, on cortical granule translocation. We tested several different approaches to either inhibit or to stimulate the process. While this repertoire is not exhaustive, it does include diverse reagent types potentially impacting multiple different pathways. We tested 1-methyladenine and similar compounds for their ability to activate maturation as they do in the closely related starfish (Kishimoto, 1999), but none of these reagents had any effect on stimulating maturation (or in delaying the process; data not shown).
cAMP levels in mammalian and frog oocytes are key to meiotic progression and artificially high cAMP levels high block germinal vesicle breakdown in these cells. To test the effect of cAMP in meiotic maturation in sea urchin oocytes, isolated oocytes were cultured in ASW/ampicillin with several reagents that keep the cAMP levels artificially high in the oocyte. These include dibutyrl cAMP, theophylline, IBMX, 5-DMAP and combinations thereof. The results show that each reagent that elevates cAMP levels had a dramatic effect in blocking maturation (Fig. 2A). For dbcAMP and theophylline, dramatically increased concentrations (in excess of 400 µg/ml) showed neither adverse effect on the cells nor any additional inhibitory effect on GVBD. However, IBMX had a narrower range of useful concentrations: at 0.5 µM and above, cells became blebby and died within 12 hours of treatment. With these treatments, oocytes could be blocked from GVBD (greater than 50%) for 2 days or longer with no adverse effect. Key to this success though was a constant (every 12 hours) replacement of fresh media with the test reagent. Effective recovery of the oocytes from these reagents showed that the treatments did not compromise viability. Instead, the recovered oocytes actually showed enhanced synchrony of maturation. Perhaps some factor important for maturation accumulated during the culture period, and removal of the inhibitor was able to stimulate maturation in the population of competent oocytes. Although the mechanism is not known, this phenomenon may be useful technically in synchronizing or predicting maturation within a population.
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We also tested the effect of coelomic fluid on oocyte maturation, reasoning that as the ovaries are directly bathed in coelomic fluid, that perhaps removing the ovary and culturing the oocytes in vitro in ASW may release the oocyte from an inhibition of maturation. Coelomic fluid was isolated from gravid females and the oocytes were bathed directly in 100%, 50% or 10% coelomic fluid. Oocytes were then monitored regularly. No differences in maturation rate, or overall percentages of maturation were observed, however, when compared with controls (Fig. 2B and data not shown). Thus, the maturation of oocytes we observed in vitro is not simply because of the release of an inhibitor present within coelomic fluid. Instead, it is possible that maturation is blocked by direct interaction between somatic cells of the ovary and oocytes by a cAMP-dependent pathway.
The cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) activity of maturation-promoting factor (MPF) is required for meiotic resumption in all oocytes examined, and is associated with cAMP-dependent activities (Grieco et al., 1996). Effective and selective inhibitors of Cdk1 include roscovitine and olomoucine (Meijer et al., 1997
). Treatment of oocyte cultures with roscovitine resulted in striking inhibition in meiotic maturation (Fig. 2B,E and up to 48 hours, data not shown). While the germinal vesicle of roscovitine-treated oocytes remains intact with a distinct nucleolus, the germinal vesicle shape and position becomes asymmetrical (Fig. 2E). This phenotype is also observed when oocytes are treated with olomoucine (Fig. 2B and data not shown). While olomoucine inhibits Cdk1, it is less specific than is roscovitine, and is less efficacious in our assays (Fig. 2B) (Meijer et al., 1997
). Additional reagents used to test the regulation of oocyte maturation, and their efficacy, are shown in Table 1.
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To assay endocytosis, we used two types of markers, each of which have previously been used in sea urchin eggs and embryos. These include FM1-43 (fluorescent lipophilic, membrane impermeant dye, as a marker for the fate of internalized plasma membrane), and rhodaminated dextran as a fluid-phase marker (Whalley et al., 1995). We isolated oocytes and cultured them with FM1-43 and/or rhodaminated dextran in the presence or absence of cytoskeletal inhibitors, and then imaged the live oocytes by confocal microscopy. When endocytosis was compared between the different cell treatments, we found first that oocytes are very active in endocytosis throughout oogenesis in vitro, compared with eggs and embryos (Fig. 6 and data not shown). Second, oocyte endocytosis is insensitive to cAMP levels (data not shown); in either the presence or absence of cAMP levels that inhibit meiotic maturation, endocytosis is equivalent. This result negates the possibility that treatment regimes on meiosis block cortical granule translocation by an indirect affect on microfilament function. Third, internalization of endocytic vesicles is insensitive to microtubule disruption, but completely dependent on the presence of microfilaments (Fig. 6). Cells were treated with cytochalasin B, latrunculin A, jasplackinolide or cytochalasin D (Fig. 6 and data not shown) to disrupt microfilament function, or with colchicines to disrupt microtubule function. Note that surface labeling of the oocyte by FM1-43 appears unaffected in any treatment relative to control cells. Internalization of label is, however, dramatically reduced or eliminated when cells are treated to disrupt microfilaments, whereas colchicine-treated oocytes endocytose normally (Fig. 6). These results show that microfilaments and microfilament-mediated motors are functionally active in oocytes to move specific vesicle types. We conclude that cortical granules do not translocate because they either lack a linkage to the microfilaments or they lack a functional motor with which to travel on the microfilament. The lack of translocation is not because of a global absence of microfilaments or of microfilament-motor function in these oocytes.
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When oocytes were first treated with cytochalasin D (Fig. 7C,D,G,H, or data not shown for latrunculin A), we found that under high centrifugal conditions, nearly 100% of the cortical granules were displaced to the centrifugal most pole of the cell, indistinguishable from control cells. Following microfilament disruption, the cells became slightly distorted (note the bulge in Fig. 7D and compare with 7B) reflective of a loss in cortical microfilament integrity. Stratification under lower speeds (1500 g for 10 minutes) resulted in only partial displacement of the cortical granules in control cells (Fig. 7E,F), enabling a more-sensitive assessment of the granule mobility in the cytoplasm. Disruption of the microfilaments, however, caused no additional mobility of either cortical granules (Fig. 7G,H) or the other organelles examined (data not shown). Thus, cortical granules in oocytes do not appear to be linked to microfilaments or microfilament-associated structures in a way that would retard their mobility in the cytoplasm.
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The extension of the above hypothesis is that cortical granules do associate with microfilaments at meiosis when they translocate to the cortex. This linkage would presumably impede their displacement. To test this hypothesis, oocytes that had undergone GVBD (after GVBD but before formation of the pronucleus) were stratified, and compared with both stratified GVBD-sibling oocytes treated with cytochalasin D and to sibling oocytes prior to GVBD (Fig. 8). Under low-speed centrifugation, oocytes stratified during meiosis show very little displacement of their cortical granules (26.5%; Fig. 8A,G). However, meiotic oocytes treated with cytochalasin D for 10 minutes prior to centrifugation show markedly elevated levels of displacement (76.5%; Fig. 8D,G), significantly different from control meiotic oocytes, and more closely aligned with pre-meiotic oocytes. This change in mobility of cortical granules associated with microfilaments suggests that cortical granules first become associated with microfilaments at meiotic maturation and these microfilaments then direct their translocation to the cell surface.
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DISCUSSION |
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Currently, we do not know the trigger for initiation of cortical granule translocation but we will need to consider three likely candidates that may be mutually inclusive. These are: (1) cortical granule motor activation, (2) cortical granule attachment to a motor protein and/or (3) assembly of a microfilament pathway for cortical granule transit. Although our assay for microfilament association is at a macro-level at this point, it is currently not possible to better resolve any association between cortical granules and microfilaments in situ; even were we able to image individual microfilament bundles, a co-labeling of microfilaments with cortical granules does not reveal a functional association.
The mechanism of vesicle cargo linkage to cytoskeletal motors is not well understood, but recent results are intriguing in light of our results here with cortical granules. Members of the Ras superfamily of proteins, in particular Rab-GTPases, are present on organelles and function as part of a recognition complex for motor proteins (reviewed by Deacon and Gelfand, 2001). Evidence derived from both genetic and biochemical approaches point to a Rab-myosin V interaction in directing vesicle movement. This is wonderfully shown in a Rab27a-myosin V interaction in the transport of melanosomes from melanocytes to keratinocytes (Deacon and Gelfand, 2001
; Scott and Zhao, 2001
; Wu et al., 2001
). Inhibition of this interaction results in a decrease or loss of keratinocyte pigmentation. In addition, the gene responsible for the human disease Griscelli syndrome was recently shown to be RAB27A. Individuals with a mutation in this gene experience partial albinism, as a result of defects in pigment transport mechanisms. In the context of cortical granule function, this is also important. Although cortical granules translocate perfectly well without microtubules, the cortical granules do not distribute and dock properly at the cell cortex and therefore do not exocytose upon normal stimulation. One conclusion of this phenotype is that a myosin motor functions in getting the cortical granules to the cortex, and a microtubule motor serves as a molecular parking attendant, to distribute and dock cortical granules uniformly.
What is the putative microfilament motor involved in cortical granule movement? Currently we do not know, but we will focus on a member of the non-conventional myosin family, myosin V. The C-terminal tail of this motor protein appears to attach to vesicles for transport in a microfilament dependent process, via a Rab-GTP mediated process (Deacon and Gelfand, 2001). Furthermore, it was recently shown that melanosomes contain Rab3a and that this isoform is required for melanosome movement to the cell surface. Of interest here in sea urchin oocytes is that a Rab3 homolog is found abundantly and selectively on cortical granules throughout their biogenesis, translocation, docking and fusion (Conner and Wessel, 1998
). Thus, one model to test in the future is the association of sea urchin myosin-V with the cortical granule Rab3. A functional association of myosin with vesicles appears to be regulated by a cell-cycle dependent kinase. For example, myosin V can be released from cargos by phosphorylation directly by CaMKII, and engage instead in mitosis- (or meiosis-?) specific activities (Cheney and Rodriguez, 2001
). Specifically, CaMKII activity is implicated in cortical granule translocation in mice oocytes (Abbott and Ducibella, 2001
; Abbott et al., 2001
). Movement of the cortical granules to the cortex in mice is also suggested to occur via microfilaments: translocation is inhibited by cytochalasin D, but not by inhibitors of microtubule dynamics (Connors et al., 1998
). Although these studies were also performed in static, fixed oocytes, it does suggest a conserved process between chordates and echinoderms.
The mechanism of initiating cortical granule translocation has also been examined in oocytes of starfish. In the closely related oocytes, 1-methyladenine stimulates activation of MPF to reinitiate meiosis. 1-Methyladenine has no effect on sea urchin oocytes, but in starfish it triggers Ca2+ release into the cytoplasm via Ins(1,4,5)P3 receptors, resulting in major microfilament changes (Heil-Chapdelaine and Otto, 1996; Santella et al., 1999
). Although cortical granule translocation was not quantitated in these studies, observed changes in the microfilaments include increased polymerization throughout the cytoplasm, as well as increased cortical and germinal vesicle microfilaments. It is noteworthy that these changes occurred prior to germinal vesicle breakdown, and corresponds to the timing of initiation of cortical granule translocation in the sea urchin oocyte.
The presence of microfilaments in the germinal vesicles of the sea urchin oocytes is intriguing for several reasons: (1) the transient nature of their appearance; (2) the coincidence of their presence with initiation of cortical granule translocation; (3) the fact that they are found at a time when the germinal vesicle is moving to the animal pole; and (4) that they are correlated with a change in the germinal vesicle shape and pending GVBD (Stricker and Schatten, 1991). As actin was localized in the present study by both phalloidin and antibody labeling in situ, and as both approaches have identified a transient population of actin filaments in the germinal vesicle, a step in actin nuclear localization, rather than polymerization, is likely to be limiting. A stage-dependent accumulation of actin in germinal vesicles has also been reported in frog oocytes (Parfenov et al., 1995
), where it is believed that microfilaments contribute to nuclear vesiculation. In addition, several regulators of actin polymerization are also present in the nucleus or translocate to the nucleus (Rando et al., 2000
), suggesting that there is some function of actin in the nucleus that is subject to regulation. For example, Zhao et al. (Zhao et al., 1998
) find actin and actin-related proteins in transcriptional complexes of mammalian cells. This has also been seen in yeast, with genetic evidence supporting actin function both in regulating transcription and chromatin remodeling (Olave et al., 2002
).
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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