(4) Fertilization: Beginning a New Organism Part 2 Flashcards
(20 cards)
consequences of polyspermy
- entry of more than 1 sperm into egg
- triploid fertilized egg
- abnormal segregation of chromosomes during mitotic cell divison (3 sets of chromosomes divided amongst 4 daughter cells)
- will not develop past first few divisions
consequence of a triploid egg
- 3 chromosome sets (2 paternal) and
- 2 sperm centrioles (a. 2 mitotic spindles form at first cell division; b. 4 poles toward which chromosomes can migrate)
prevention of polyspermy in sea urchins
a. polyspermy must be avoided for correct development to proceed
b. 2 mechanisms ensure prevention of polyspermy in sea urchins (fast block and slow block)
fast block to polyspermy
- occurs within 1-3 sec of sperm entry
- sperm entry causes depolarization fo egg PM from -70mV to +20mV (Na_ channels open in egg PM upon fertilization Na+ enters; makes egg more positive)
- depolarization inhibits additional sperm entry (unclear why)
- transient; only lasts ~1 min
slow block to polyspermy
- slower mechanical block (occurs ~20 sec after fertilization)
- also called the cortical reaction
- fusion of cortical granules with egg PM and release of contents into space between PM and vitellin membrane (the perivitelline space)
contents of cortical granules
- cortical granule serine proteases (CGSPs)
- glycosaminoglycans (GAGs)
- peroxidase and transglutaminase
- hyalin
cortical granule serine proteases (CGSPs)
- degrade protein-protein connections between VM and PM
- degrade bindin receptors
glycosaminoglycans (GAGs)
increase osmolarity of perivitelline space (make hyperosmatic)
water enters space, pushing VM farther away from PM
the raised VM referred to as the fertilization envelope
peroxidase and transglutaminase
cross-links proteins in fertilization envelope, making it impenetrable to additional sperm
hyalin
coats the egg
will provide sites of attachment for blastomeres during cleavage stage
udx1
egg PM enzyme that forms hydrogen perozide which is required substrate of TG and OVOP
OVOP
ovoperoxidase; enzyme that crosslinks proteins of VM to harden it
cortical reaction is Ca2+ dependent
intracellular ca2+ release starts at point of sperm entry; wave of ca2_ release occurs across entire egg within 30 sec; Ca2+ is rapidly re-sequestered
where does the ca2+ come from?
- from the egg’s own endoplasmic reticulum
- what does it do? causes cortical granules to fuse to egg PM and release their contents
what triggers ca2+ release in sea urchins?
- sperm receptor= believed to be a G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR)
- TK= tyrosine kinase
- PLC= phospholipase C
- PIP2= phosphatidylinositol 4,5 bisphosphate
- IP3= inositol 1, 4, 5 trisphosphate
IP3 and Ca2+ release
IP3 triggered release of Ca2+ from ER results in wave of Ca2+ release across entire egg; cortical granules released from egg, beginning at point of sperm entry
evidence for role of Gq
sperm is loaded with Ca2+ sensitive dye and then with Gq inhibitory and then it is allowed to be fertilized
bight red dluroscnece shows high concentration of ca2+; no red fluroscence in presence of inhibitor; hence, gq is required for Ca2+ release into cytoplasm
roles of Ca2+
release of cortical granules (slow block to polyspermy)
egg activation (reentry of cell into cell cycle- resumption of mitosis; reactivaion of egg protein synthesis (translation) from stored materal mRNAs
role of DAG (diacylglycerol)
both DAG and Ca2+ activate the Na+/H+ exchange pump
PLC activated DAG activated PKC activated Na+/H+ exchange=> increase in intracellular pH-> stimulation of protein synthesis, DNA replication, and cytoplasmic movements of morphogenetic material
inside a newly fertilized sea urchin egg:
a. sperm mitochondrioa and flagellum break down
b. burst of protein synthesis (translation) from maternal mRNAs
(histones, tubulins, actins, morphogenic factors, membrane protein for mitosis)
c. sperm centriole produces microtubules that draw sperm and egg nuclei toward each other and nuclei fuse
d. chromosomes duplicate
e. sperm centriole duplicates
f. mitotic spindle forms
g. nuclear envelope breaks down
h. duplicated material and paternal chromosome align on mitotic spindle
i. first mitosis and cleavage occurs