| Literature DB >> 33664246 |
Laleh Abbassi1,2,3, Stephany El-Hayek1,4,5, Karen Freire Carvalho1,2, Wusu Wang1,6, Qin Yang1, Sofia Granados-Aparici1, Rafael Mondadori7, Vilceu Bordignon7, Hugh J Clarke8,9,10,11.
Abstract
Germ cells are physically coupled to somatic support cells of the gonad during differentiation, but this coupling must be disrupted when they are mature, freeing them to participate in fertilization. In mammalian females, coupling occurs via specialized filopodia that project from the ovarian follicular granulosa cells to the oocyte. Here, we show that signaling through the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in the granulosa, which becomes activated at ovulation, uncouples the germ and somatic cells by triggering a massive and temporally synchronized retraction of the filopodia. Although EGFR signaling triggers meiotic maturation of the oocyte, filopodial retraction is independent of the germ cell state, being regulated solely within the somatic compartment, where it requires ERK-dependent calpain-mediated loss of filopodia-oocyte adhesion followed by Arp2/3-mediated filopodial shortening. By uncovering the mechanism regulating germ-soma uncoupling at ovulation, our results open a path to improving oocyte quality in human and animal reproduction.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33664246 PMCID: PMC7933413 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21644-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919