The eggs of most or all animals are thought to be activated after fertilization by a transient increase in free cytosolic Ca 2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i). We have applied Ca2+-selective microelectrodes to detect such an increase in fertilized eggs of the frog, Xenopus laevis. As observed with an electrode in the animal hemisphere, [Ca2+]~ increased from 0.4 to 1.2 pM over the course of 2 min after fertilization, and returned to its original value during the next 10 min. No further changes in [Ca2+]~ were detected through the first cleavage division. In eggs impaled with two Ca 2+ electrodes, the Ca 2+ pulse was observed to travel as a wave from the animal to the vegetal hemisphere, propagating at a rate of ~10 #m/s across the animal hemisphere. The apparent delay between the start of the fertilization potential and initiation of the Ca 2+ wave at the sperm entry site as ~1 min. Though these observations describe only the behavior of subcortical [Ca2+]i, we suggest that our data represent the subcortical extension of the cortical Ca 2+ wave thought to trigger cortical granule exocytosis, and we present evidence that both the timing and magnitude of the Ca 2+ pulse we observed are consistent with this identity. This first quantification of subcortical [Ca2+]~ during fertilization indicates that the Ca 2+ transient is available to regulate processes (e.g., protein synthesis) in the subcortical cytosol.The calcium theory of egg activation, which holds that an increase in free cytosolic Ca 2÷ concentration ([Ca2÷]i) 1 sets in motion the early events of the "program of fertilization" (e.g., see reference 34), is amply supported by a variety of studies (2, 5-7, 10, 13, 14, 23, 27, 28, 37, 38). Qualitative measurements of [Ca2÷]i changes after fertilization in eggs of the medaka fish (14, 23), sea urchin (7, 28), starfish (7a), and mouse (6)
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Procurement and Handling of Gametes:Mature Xenopus oocytes were squeezed from females induced to ovulate via subcutaneous injection of 800-1,000 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) on the previous night. Sperm were prepared by mincing dissected testes in FI solution (see below). To prevent prick activation, eggs were impaled in FI that contained 10 mM chlorobutanol, which was replaced with regular FI just before insemination. FI solution was prepared as previously described (17). Experiments were conducted at room temperature, between 20.5 and 24"C.
Fabrication of Microelectrodes:Our Ca 2+ electrodes were a modified version of those of Tsien and Rink (31,32). Chromic acid-cleaned borosilicate glass micropipettes without an inner fiber were broken to ~2-~m tip diameter and rendered hydrophobic by baking for 30 min at 200"C in a chamber that contained tri-N-chlorobutylsilane (Pfaltz & Bauer Inc., Stamford, CT) vapor in air. The pipettes were then backfilled with pCa 7 calibration buffer (see below) by applying gentle pressure from a syringe to the back end of the pipettes, then the tips were filled via suction with a 50-...