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Developmental Biology | 1988

Acetylated α-tubulin in microtubules during mouse fertilization and early development

Gerald Schatten; Calvin Simerly; David J. Asai; Ester Szöke; Peter H. Cooke; Heide Schatten

Abstract α-Tubulin in the microtubules of mouse oocytes and embryos is acetylated in a specific spatial and temporal sequence. In the unfertilized oocyte, a monoclonal antibody to the acetylated form of α-tubulin is bound predominantly at the poles of the arrested metaphase meiotic spindle. The labeling intensity of the spindle microtubules is weaker as observed by immunofluorescence using oocytes double-labeled for total tubulin and acetylated α-tubulin, and as measured by immuno high-voltage electron microscopy (immunoHVEM) with colloidal gold; cytasters are not acetylated. At meiotic anaphase, the spindle becomes labeled, and by telophase and during second polar body formation only the meiotic midbody is acetylated. The sperm axoneme retains its acetylation after incorporation though the interphase microtubules are not detected. First mitosis follows a pattern similar to that observed at the second meiosis and during interphase only the mitotic midbodies are acetylated. After treatment with cold, colcemid, or griseofulvin, the remaining stable microtubules are acetylated, but immunoHVEM observations suggest that these fibers might not have been acetylated prior to microtubule disruption. Taxol stabilization does not alter acetylation patterns. Acetylated microtubules are not necessarily old microtubules since acetylated fibers are observed at 30 sec after cold recovery. These results show the presence of acetylated microtubules during meiosis and mitosis and demonstrate a cell-cycle-specific pattern of acetylation, with acetylated microtubules found at the centrosomes at metaphase, an increase in spindle labeling at anaphase, and the selective deacetylation of all but midbody microtubules at telophase.


Cytoskeleton | 1996

Cold-treated centrosome: isolation of centrosomes from mitotic sea urchin eggs, production of an anticentrosomal antibody, and novel ultrastructural imaging.

Catherine Thompson-Coffe; Gérard Coffe; Heide Schatten; Daniel Mazia; Gerald Schatten

A novel isolation of centrosomes is described and it was used to both generate a centrosome-specific monoclonal antibody and to image with high-resolution low-voltage scanning electron microscopy the surface details of the isolated centrosome. At first mitotic prometaphase, sea urchin zygotes are chilled on ice overnight. While most of the microtubules disassemble, the mitotic centrosomes collapse into aggregated masses. These centrosomes have been isolated, and used to generate a monoclonal antibody, designated 4D2, which is reactive with interphase and mitotic centrosomes. 4D2 staining of centrosomes is similar, but not identical, to that of other centrosomal antibodies like Ah6 and 5051. Centrosomal material is detected as a compact sphere after cold treatment; upon recovery the sphere expands and undergoes the shape changes previously described [Mazia et al., 1987: J. Cell Biol. 105:206a] to eventually reorganize a normal mitotic apparatus.


Chromosoma | 1988

Kinetochore appearance during meiosis, fertilization and mitosis in mouse oocytes and zygotes.

Gerald Schatten; Calvin Simerly; Douglas K. Palmer; Robert L. Margolis; Gerd G. Maul; Brian S. Andrews; Heide Schatten

The events of mammalian fertilization overlap with the completion of meiosis and first mitosis; the pronuclei never fuse, instead the parental genomes first intermix at the mitotic spindle equator at metaphase. Since kinetochores are essential for the attachment of chromosomes to spindle microtubules, this study explores their appearance and behavior in mouse oocytes, zygotes and embryos undergoing the completion of meiosis, fertilization and mitoses. Kinetochores are traced with immunofluorescence microscopy using autoimmune sera from patients with CREST (CREST = calcinosis, Raynauds phenomenon, esophageal dysmotility, sclerodactyly, telangiectasia) scleroderma. These sera cross-react with the 17 kDa centromere protein (CENP-A) and the 80 kDa centromere protein (CENP-B) found at the kinetochores in human cell cultures. The unfertilized oocyte is ovulated arrested at second meiotic metaphase and kinetochores are detectable as paired structures aligned at the spindle equator. At meiotic anaphase, the kinetochores separate and remain aligned at the distal sides of the chromosomes until telophase, when their alignment perpendicular to the spindle axis is lost. The female pronucleus and the second polar body nucleus each receive a detectable complement of kinetochores. Mature sperm have neither detectable centrosomes nor detectable kinetochores, and shortly after sperm incorporation kinetochores become detectable in the decondensing male pronucleus. In pronuclei, the kinetochores are initially distributed randomly and later found in apposition with nucleoli. At mitosis, the kinetochores behave in a pattern similar to that observed at meiosis or mitosis in somatic cells: irregular distribution at prophase, alignment at metaphase, separation at anaphase and redistribution at telophase. They are also detectable in later stage embryos. Colcemid treatment disrupts the meiotic spindle and results in the dispersion of the meiotic chromosomes along the oocyte cortex; the chromosomes remain condensed with detectable kinetochores. Fertilization of Colcemid-treated oocytes results in the incorporation of a sperm which is unable to decondense into a male pronucleus. Remarkably kinetochores become detectable at 5 h post-insemination, suggesting that the emergence of the paternal kinetochores is not strictly dependent on male pronuclear decondensation.


Current Topics in Developmental Biology | 1987

Chapter 2 Cytoskeletal Alterations and Nuclear Architectural Changes During Mammalian Fertilization

Gerald Schatten; Heide Schatten

Publisher Summary This chapter considers the structural organization of the egg cytoskeletal and nuclear architectural changes during mammalian, especially mouse, fertilization. Because much of the evidence regarding fertilization has been derived from investigations on invertebrate and lower vertebrate systems, this information is also considered as the paradigm against which the mammalian work is compared. The state of the knowledge regarding mammalian fertilization is considered, with the inclusion of some of the remaining questions. The chapter kindles further interest in the application of cellular and molecular structural investigations for solving fundamental problems in developmental biology and highlights the importance of studying cells during development in order to generate a fuller appreciation for cell and molecular biology. Fertilization bridges the discontinuity in generations and is considered successful if one, and only one, sperm nucleus unites with the egg nucleus within an activated egg cytoplasm. In addition, the fertilized egg must also be primed to prepare for its next challenges: the cell divisions leading to embryogenesis. The egg affects several motions as well as numerous alterations in cytoplasmic and nuclear structure. The physical incorporation of the sperm, the elicitation of polar bodies in systems inseminated as oocytes, and the formation of the fertilization or incorporation cone are changes in cell shape mediated by the egg cortex. The microfilament inhibitors cytochalasin and latrunculin have remarkable effects on unfertilized mouse oocytes.


Advances in Space Research | 1992

Microgravity effects on sea urchin fertilization and development

S. Steffen; R. Fiser; Calvin Simerly; Heide Schatten; Gerald Schatten

Gravity has been a pervasive influence on all living systems and there is convincing evidence to suggest that it alters fertilization and embryogenesis in several developmental systems. Notwithstanding the global importance of gravity on development, it has only been recently possible to begin to design experiments which might directly investigate the specific effects of this vector. The goal of this research program is to explore and understand the effects of gravity on fertilization and early development using sea urchins as a model system. Sea urchin development has several advantages for this project including the feasibility of maintaining and manipulating these cells during spaceflight, the high percentage of normal fertilization and early development, and the abundant knowledge about molecular, biochemical, and cellular events during embryogenesis which permits detailed insights into the mechanism by which gravity might interfere with development. Furthermore, skeletal calcium is deposited into the embryonic spicules within a day of fertilization permitting studies of the effects of gravity on bone calcium deposition.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1985

Microtubule configurations during fertilization, mitosis, and early development in the mouse and the requirement for egg microtubule-mediated motility during mammalian fertilization

Gerald Schatten; Calvin Simerly; Heide Schatten


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1986

Behavior of centrosomes during fertilization and cell division in mouse oocytes and in sea urchin eggs

Heide Schatten; Gerald Schatten; D Mazia; R Balczon; Calvin Simerly


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1985

Nuclear lamins and peripheral nuclear antigens during fertilization and embryogenesis in mice and sea urchins.

Gerald Schatten; Gerd G. Maul; Heide Schatten; N Chaly; Calvin Simerly; R Balczon; D L Brown


Archive | 1989

The Cell biology of fertilization

Heide Schatten; Gerald Schatten


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1991

Maternal inheritance of centrosomes in mammals? Studies on parthenogenesis and polyspermy in mice.

Gerald Schatten; Calvin Simerly; Heide Schatten

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Gerald Schatten

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Daniel Mazia

University of California

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Cathy Thompson-Coffe

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Douglas K. Palmer

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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