| Literature DB >> 10892570 |
M S Sato1, M Yoshitomo, T Mohri, S Miyazaki.
Abstract
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) into mammalian eggs induces repetitive rises in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) which are the pivotal signal in fertilization. Spatiotemporal aspects of [Ca2+]i rises following ICSI into the periphery of mouse eggs were investigated with high-speed confocal microscopy. The first Ca2+ response was generated 25-30 min after ICSI, when [Ca2+]i increased slowly and reached a certain level. The [Ca2+]i rise occurred synchronously over the ooplasm, attained the peak in 40-70 s, and lasted for 5-7 min. Succeeding Ca2+ responses occurred at intervals of 20-30 min, associated with the faster rate of [Ca2+]i rise and the shorter duration as Ca2+ oscillations progressed. The [Ca2+]i rises took the form of a wave that started from an arbitrary cortical region, but not from the vicinity of the injected sperm head. The Ca2+ wave became more pronounced and propagated across the egg faster in the later Ca2+ responses. An artifactual [Ca2+]i rise was inevitably produced during the ICSI procedure. The larger artifact affected the subsequent first Ca2+ response, resulting in the faster [Ca2+]i rise (time to peak, 10-20 s), slight spatial heterogeneity of [Ca2+]i rise in the ooplasm (but not a wave) and the shorter duration (3-4 min). The artifact slightly affected the amplitude of the second Ca2+ response, but little affected the later Ca2+ responses. It is suggested that the factor(s) that leaked out of the injected spermatozoon diffuses to a wide area and sensitizes Ca2+ channels of the endoplasmic reticulum to induce Ca2+ release synchronously over the ooplasm. The enhanced sensitization leads to propagating Ca2+ release initiated from the cortex that is more sensitive to the sperm factor.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10892570 DOI: 10.1054/ceca.1999.0053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Calcium ISSN: 0143-4160 Impact factor: 6.817