Author:
Courtot Anne-Marie,Pesty Arlette,Lefèvre Brigitte
Abstract
The role of calmodulin in fertilisation
events was examined in a zona-free mouse system by using a selective calmodulin inhibitor,
calmidazolium (1 μM). The effects of this antagonist were studied either on the ooplasmic calcium
oscillations induced by fertilisation by using the Ca2+ indicator, fluo-3/AM, or on
pronucleus formation 4 h later by using the nucleic acid stain, Syto-15. When the calmidazolium
treatment was applied to one or the other gamete before insemination, the fertilisation process was
affected only when spermatozoa were treated: most of the oocytes were partially fertilised as
demonstrated by the profile of Ca2+ oscillations and the presence of polar bodies with no
typical male and female pronuclei. When the treatment was applied during insemination, more than half
the oocytes were unfertilised and only a few were partially fertilised. These results demonstrate
that: (1) the calmodulin-dependent events taking place in spermatozoa before insemination appear
essential at least for regular Ca2+ oscillations and for pronucleus formation; (2) the
inhibition of calmodulin by calmidazolium applied to metaphase II oocytes before insemination has no
major impact on their fertilising ability; and (3) at the time of gamete fusion calmodulin, either
from the oocyte or from the spermatozoon, is essential for fertilisation to occur.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology
Cited by
5 articles.
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