Calcium has an important role in the events of egg activation and early preimplantation development. We investigated changes in intracellular calcium concentration in human oocytes at fertilization using the calcium-sensitive photoprotein aequorin. Oocytes were donated for research by patients undergoing in-vitro fertilization treatment in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology. Cumulus cells, and in some cases zonae pellucidae, were removed by appropriate enzyme treatment. Single oocytes were micro-injected with aequorin and incubated in a chamber perfused with pre-equilibrated culture medium in a photomultiplier system. Eleven zona-intact and 15 zona-free oocytes were incubated with sperm, and oocytes from each group were incubated without sperm as controls. Dramatic transient increases in intracellular free calcium concentration were recorded in three zona-intact and seven zona-free oocytes, thought to be the first direct measurements of intracellular changes in human oocytes at fertilization. The amplitude (up to 2.5 microM), duration (120 s) and frequency (every 10-35 min) of these transients were similar in zona-intact and zona-free oocytes. They resemble those recorded in mouse oocytes, which may therefore be a suitable model for biochemical events at human fertilization.
During fertilization in mouse eggs, the sperm triggers a series of intracellular Ca2+ oscillations that lead to egg activation, as indicated by pronuclear formation. We show that Ca2+ oscillations in fertilized mouse eggs can be inhibited by addition of either the Ca2+ chelator 1,2-bis-(o-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetra-acetic acid acetoxymethyl ester (BAPTA-AM) or the heavy-metal-ion chelator N,N,N',N'-tetrakis-(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine (TPEN) plus dithiothreitol (DTT). Both treatments inhibited Ca2+ oscillations, but they had different effects upon egg activation. Blocking Ca2+ oscillations with BAPTA-AM after the occurrence of just two Ca2+ spikes resulted in most eggs forming pronuclei. However, we found that BAPTA-AM-treated fertilizing eggs showed a decreased rate of protein synthesis, which by itself can promote egg activation. In contrast, blocking Ca2+ oscillations with TPEN plus DTT was accompanied by the inhibition of egg activation with no significant effect on protein synthesis. In eggs that were fertilized and then treated with TPEN plus DTT, there was a correlation between the number of Ca2+ spikes and the proportion of eggs that formed pronuclei, as well as between the number of Ca2+ spikes and the time taken for pronuclear formation and the first mitosis to occur. The addition of TPEN plus DTT did not block the generation of Ca2+ spikes or pronuclear formation when eggs were artificially stimulated by electroporation pulses. These data suggest that TPEN plus DTT inhibits pronuclear formation in fertilizing eggs via the inhibition of Ca2+ oscillations and that the number of Ca2+ spikes may regulate egg activation.
Fusion of sperm and egg plasma membranes is an early and essential event at fertilization but it is not known if it plays a part in the signal transduction mechanism that leads to the oscillations in the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) that accompany mammalian egg activation. We have used two independent fluorescence methods and confocal microscopy to show that cytoplasmic continuity of egg and sperm precedes the onset of the first [Ca2+]i increase in mouse eggs. The Ca2+ indicator dye Ca2+-green dextran was microinjected and its transfer from egg to sperm was monitored. We found that it occurred before, and without a requirement for, any detectable [Ca2+]i increase in the egg. In separate experiments [Ca2+]i changes were recorded in populations of eggs, using fura red, and the eggs fixed at various times after some of the eggs had shown a [Ca2+]i transient. Fusion of the sperm and egg was then assessed by Hoechst dye transfer. All eggs that showed a [Ca2+]i increase had a fused sperm but more than half of the eggs contained a sperm but had not undergone a [Ca2+]i increase. These data indicate that sperm-egg fusion precedes [Ca2+]i changes and we estimate that the elapsed time between sperm-egg fusion and the onset of the [Ca2+li oscillations is 1–3 minutes. Finally, sperm-egg fusion was prevented by using low pH medium which reversibly prevented [Ca2+]i oscillations in eggs that had been inseminated. This was not due to disruption of signalling mechanisms, since [Ca2+]i changes still occurred if low pH was applied after the onset of oscillations at fertilization. [Ca2+]i changes also occurred in eggs in low pH in response to the muscarinic agonist carbachol. These data are consistent with the idea that the [Ca2+]i signals that occur in mammalian eggs at fertilization are initiated by events that are closely coupled to the fusion of the sperm and egg membranes.
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