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Featured researches published by Li-Jun Huo.


Cell Cycle | 2007

MEK1/2 Regulates Microtubule Organization, Spindle Pole Tethering and Asymmetric Division During Mouse Oocyte Meiotic Maturation

Ling-Zhu Yu; Bo Xiong; Wen-Xue Gao; Chun-Min Wang; Zhisheng Zhong; Li-Jun Huo; Qiang Wang; Yi Hou; Kui Liu; X Johné Liu; Heide Schatten; Da-Yuan Chen; Qing-Yuan Sun

It is well known that MAPK plays pivotal roles in oocyte maturation, but the function of MEK (MAPK kinase) remains unknown. We have studied the expression, subcellular localization and functional roles of MEK during meiotic maturation of mouse oocytes. We found that MEK1/2 phoshorylation (p-MEK1/2, indicative of MEK activation) was low in GV (germinal vesicle) stage, increased 2h after GVBD (germinal vesicle breakdown), and reached the maximum at metaphase II. Secondly, we found that P-MEK1/2 was restricted in the GV prior to GVBD. In prometaphase I and metaphase I, p-MEK1/2 was mainly associated with the spindle, especially with the spindle poles. At anaphase I and telophase I, p-MEK1/2 became diffusely distributed in the region between the separating chromosomes, and then became associated with the midbody. The association of p-MEK1/2 with spindle poles was further confirmed by its colocalization with the centrosomal proteins, γ-tubulin and NuMA. Thirdly, we have investigated the possible functional role of MEK1/2 activation by intravenous administration and intrabursal injection of a specific MEK inhibitor, U0126, and by microinjection of MEK siRNA into oocytes. All these manipulations cause disorganized spindle poles and spindle structure, misaligned chromosomes and larger than normal polar bodies. Our results suggest that MEK1/2 may function as a centrosomal protein and may have roles in microtubule organization, spindle pole tethering and asymmetric division during mouse oocyte maturation.


Biology of Reproduction | 2004

Protein Kinase C and Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Cascade in Mouse Cumulus Cells: Cross Talk and Effect on Meiotic Resumption of Oocyte

Heng-Yu Fan; Li-Jun Huo; Da-Yuan Chen; Heide Schatten; Qing-Yuan Sun

Abstract Protein kinase C (PKC) and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) in cumulus cells are involved in FSH-induced meiotic resumption of cumulus-enclosed oocytes (CEOs), but their regulation and cross talk are unknown. The present experiments were designed to investigate 1) the possible involvement of MAPK cascade in PKC-induced meiotic resumption; 2) the regulation of PKC on MAPK activity in FSH-induced oocyte maturation; and 3) the pattern of PKC and MAPK function in induced meiotic resumption of mouse oocytes. PKC activators, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG), induced the meiotic resumption of CEOs and activation of MAPK in cumulus cells, whereas this effect could be abolished by PKC inhibitors, calphostin C and chelerythrine, or MEK inhibitor U0126. These results suggest that PKC might induce the meiotic reinitiation of CEOs by activating MAPK in cumulus cells. Both PKC inhibitors and U0126 inhibited the FSH-induced germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) of oocytes and MAPK activation in cumulus cells, suggesting that PKC and MAPK are involved in FSH-induced GVBD of mouse CEOs. Protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX) inhibited FSH- or PMA-induced oocyte meiotic resumption, but not the MAPK activation in cumulus cells. FSH and PKC activators induced the GVBD in denuded oocytes cocultured with cumulus cells in hypoxanthine (HX)-supplemented medium, and this effect could be reversed by U0126. Thus, when activated by FSH and PKC, MAPK may stimulate the synthesis of specific proteins in cumulus cells followed by secretion of an unknown positive factor that is capable of inducing GVBD in oocytes.


Mechanisms of Development | 2004

Ubiquitin-proteasome pathway modulates mouse oocyte meiotic maturation and fertilization via regulation of MAPK cascade and cyclin B1 degradation.

Li-Jun Huo; Heng-Yu Fan; Zhisheng Zhong; Da-Yuan Chen; Heide Schatten; Qing-Yuan Sun

Degradation of proteins mediated by ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (UPP) plays important roles in the regulation of eukaryotic cell cycle. In this study, the functional roles and regulatory mechanisms of UPP in mouse oocyte meiotic maturation, fertilization, and early embryonic cleavage were studied by drug-treatment, Western blot, antibody microinjection, and confocal microscopy. The meiotic resumption of both cumulus-enclosed oocytes and denuded oocytes was stimulated by two potent, reversible, and cell-permeable proteasome inhibitors, ALLN and MG-132. The metaphase I spindle assembly was prevented, and the distribution of ubiquitin, cyclin B1, and polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) was also distorted. When UPP was inhibited, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/p90rsk phosphorylation was not affected, but the cyclin B1 degradation that occurs during normal metaphase-anaphase transition was not observed. During oocyte activation, the emission of second polar body (PB2) and the pronuclear formation were inhibited by ALLN or MG-132. In oocytes microinjected with ubiquitin antibodies, PB2 emission and pronuclear formation were also inhibited after in vitro fertilization. The expression of cyclin B1 and the phosphorylation of MAPK/p90rsk could still be detected in ALLN or MG-132-treated oocytes even at 8 h after parthenogenetic activation or insemination, which may account for the inhibition of PB2 emission and pronuclear formation. We also for the first time investigated the subcellular localization of ubiquitin protein at different stages of oocyte and early embryo development. Ubiquitin protein was accumulated in the germinal vesicle (GV), the region between the separating homologous chromosomes, the midbody, the pronuclei, and the region between the separating sister chromatids. In conclusion, our results suggest that the UPP plays important roles in oocyte meiosis resumption, spindle assembly, polar body emission, and pronuclear formation, probably by regulating cyclin B1 degradation and MAPK/p90rsk phosphorylation.


Biology of Reproduction | 2003

Involvement of Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase II (CaMKII) in Meiotic Maturation and Activation of Pig Oocytes

Heng-Yu Fan; Li-Jun Huo; Xiao-Qian Meng; Zhisheng Zhong; Yi Hou; Da-Yuan Chen; Qing-Yuan Sun

Abstract Calcium signal is important for the regulation of meiotic cell cycle in oocytes, but its downstream mechanism is not well known. The functional roles of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) in meiotic maturation and activation of pig oocytes were studied by drug treatment, Western blot analysis, kinase activity assay, indirect immunostaining, and confocal microscopy. The results indicated that meiotic resumption of both cumulus-enclosed and denuded oocytes was prevented by CaMKII inhibitor KN-93, Ant-AIP-II, or CaM antagonist W7 in a dose-dependent manner, but only germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) of denuded oocytes was inhibited by membrane permeable Ca2+ chelator BAPTA-AM. When the oocytes were treated with KN-93, W7, or BAPTA-AM after GVBD, the first polar body emission was inhibited. A quick elevation of CaMKII activity was detected after electrical activation of mature pig oocytes, which could be prevented by the pretreatment of CaMKII inhibitors. Treatment of oocytes with KN-93 or W7 resulted in the inhibition of pronuclear formation. The possible regulation of CaMKII on maturation promoting factor (MPF), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and ribosome S6 protein kinase (p90rsk) during meiotic cell cycles of pig oocytes was also studied. KN-93 and W7 prevented the accumulation of cyclin B and the full phosphorylation of MAPK and p90rsk during meiotic maturation. When CaMKII activity was inhibited during parthenogenetic activation, cyclin B, the regulatory subunit of MPF, failed to be degraded, but MAPK and p90rsk were quickly dephosphorylated and degraded. Confocal microscopy revealed that CaM and CaMKII were localized to the nucleus and the periphery of the GV stage oocytes. Both proteins were concentrated to the condensed chromosomes after GVBD. In oocytes at the meiotic metaphase MI or MII stage, CaM distributed on the whole spindle, but CaMKII was localized only on the spindle poles. After transition into anaphase, both proteins were translocated to the area between separating chromosomes. All these results suggest that CaMKII is a multifunctional regulator of meiotic cell cycle and spindle assembly and that it may exert its effect via regulation of MPF and MAPK/p90rsk activity during the meiotic maturation and activation of pig oocytes.


Biology of Reproduction | 2004

Regulation of ubiquitin-proteasome pathway on pig oocyte meiotic maturation and fertilization.

Li-Jun Huo; Heng-Yu Fan; Cheng-Guang Liang; Ling-Zhu Yu; Zhisheng Zhong; Da-Yuan Chen; Qing-Yuan Sun

Abstract Degradation of proteins mediated by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (UPP) plays essential roles in the eukaryotic cell cycle. The main aim of the present study was to analyze the functional roles and regulatory mechanisms of the UPP in pig oocyte meiotic maturation, activation, and early embryo mitosis by drug treatment, Western blot analysis, and confocal microscopy. By using the hypoxanthine-maintained meiotic arrest model, we showed that the meiotic resumption of both cumulus-enclosed oocytes and denuded oocytes was stimulated in a dose- and time-dependent manner by two potent and cell-permeable proteasome inhibitors. Both the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinase inhibitor U0126 and the maturation-promoting factor inhibitor roscovitine overcame the stimulation of germinal vesicle breakdown induced by proteasome inhibitors. The phosphorylation of MAPK and p90rsk and the expression of cyclin B1 increased in a dose- and time-dependent manner when treated with proteasome inhibitors during oocyte in vitro-maturation culture. Both U0126 and roscovitine inhibited the phosphorylation of MAPK and p90rsk, and the synthesis of cyclin B1 stimulated by proteasome inhibitors. When matured oocytes were pretreated with proteasome inhibitors and then fertilized or artificially activated, the second polar body emission and the pronuclear formation were inhibited, and the dephosphorylation of MAPK and p90rsk as well as the degradation of cyclin B1 that should occur after oocyte activation were also inhibited. We also investigated, to our knowledge for the first time, the subcellular localization of 20S proteasome α subunits at different stages of oocyte and early embryo development. The 20S proteasome α subunits were accumulated in the germinal vesicle, around the condensed chromosomes at prometaphase, with spindle at metaphase I and II, the region between the separating chromosomes, and especially the midbody at anaphase I and telophase I, the pronucleus, and the nucleus in early embryonic cells. In conclusion, our results suggest that the UPP is important at multiple steps of pig oocyte meiosis, fertilization, and early embryonic mitosis and that it may play its roles by regulating cyclin B1 degradation and MAPK/p90rsk phosphorylation.


Zygote | 2003

Effects of PKC activation on the meiotic maturation, fertilization and early embryonic development of mouse oocytes

He-Mei Quan; Heng-Yu Fan; Xiao-Qian Meng; Li-Jun Huo; Da-Yuan Chen; Heide Schatten; Pei-Man Yang; Qing-Yuan Sun

Protein kinase C (PKC) is a family of Ser/Thr protein kinase widely distributed in eukaryotes. There is evidence that PKC plays key roles in the meiotic maturation and activation of mammalian oocytes. However, the mechanism of PKCs actions and the PKC isoforms responsible for these actions are poorly understood. In this study, we reveal in mouse eggs and early embryos: (1) the effects of PKC on the meiotic and mitotic cell cycle progression during oocyte maturation, egg activation and embryonic cleavages; (2) the functional importance of classical PKC subclasses in these processes; and (3) the subcellular localization of the PKC alpha isoform during development from GV stage oocytes to the blastocyst stage embryos. The results indicate that the PKC activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) inhibits the meiotic resumption of cumulus-free mouse oocytes by a mechanism dependent not only on classical PKC activity but also on other PKC isoforms. PKC activation after germinal vesicle breakdown leads to the inhibition of mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphorylation and the arrest of cell cycle at MI stage. The second polar body emission and the cleavages of early embryos are blocked after prolonged PKC activation. The subcellular localization of PKC alpha isoform in mouse oocytes and embryos is developmental-stage associated. All these results suggest that PKC has multiple functional roles in the cell cycle progression of mouse oocytes and embryos.


Zygote | 2005

Cell-cycle-dependent subcellular localization of cyclin B1, phosphorylated cyclin B1 and p34cdc2 during oocyte meiotic maturation and fertilization in mouse.

Li-Jun Huo; Ling-Zhu Yu; Cheng-Guang Liang; Heng-Yu Fan; Da-Yuan Chen; Qing-Yuan Sun

M phase or maturation promoting factor (MPF), a kinase complex composed of the regulatory cyclin B and the catalytic p34cdc2 kinase, plays important roles in meiosis and mitosis. This study was designed to detect and compare the subcellular localization of cyclin B1, phosphorylated cyclin B1 and p34cdc2 during oocyte meiotic maturation and fertilization in mouse. We found that all these proteins were concentrated in the germinal vesicle of oocytes. Shortly after germinal vesicle breakdown, all these proteins were accumulated around the condensed chromosomes. With spindle formation at metaphase I, cyclin B1 and phosphorylated cyclin B1 were localized around the condensed chromosomes and concentrated at the spindle poles, while p34cdc2 was localized in the spindle region. At the anaphase/telophase transition, phosphorylated cyclin B1 was accumulated in the midbody between the separating chromosomes/chromatids, while p34cdc2 was accumulated in the entire spindle except for the midbody region. At metaphase II, both cyclin B1 and p34cdc2 were horizontally localized in the region with the aligned chromosomes and the two poles of the spindle, while phosphorylated cyclin B1 was localized in the two poles of spindle and the chromosomes. We could not detect a particular distribution of cyclin B1 in fertilized eggs when the pronuclei were initially formed, but in late pronuclei cyclin B1 was accumulated in the pronuclei. p34cdc2 and phosphorylated cyclin B1 were always concentrated in one pronucleus after parthenogenetic activation or in two pronuclei after fertilization. At metaphase of 1-cell embryos, cyclin B1 was accumulated around the condensed chromosomes. Cyclin B1 was accumulated in the nucleus of late 2-cell embryos but not in early 2-cell embryos. Furthermore, we also detected the accumulation of p34cdc2 in the nucleus of 2- and 4-cell embryos. All these results show that cyclin B1, phosphorylated cyclin B1 and p34cdc2 have similar distributions at some stages but different localizations at other stages during oocyte meiotic maturation and fertilization, suggesting that they may play a common role in some events but different roles in other events during oocyte maturation and fertilization.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2006

Degradation of securin in mouse and pig oocytes is dependent on ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and is required for proteolysis of the cohesion subunit, Rec8, at the metaphase-to-anaphase transition.

Li-Jun Huo; Zhisheng Zhong; Cheng-Guang Liang; Qiang Wang; Shen Yin; Jun-Shu Ai; Ling-Zhu Yu; Da-Yuan Chen; Heide Schatten; Sun Qy

Although securin/separase/cohesion pathway was reported to regulate chromosome segregation during meiotic metaphase-to-anaphase transition, little biochemical evidence was provided. We recently found that oocytes could not progress beyond meiotic metaphase when ubiquitin-proteasome pathway was inhibited, but the mechanisms remain unclear. In the present study, we investigated the quantity of securin and Rec8 protein and the localization of securin, a cohesion subunit, during oocyte meiosis providing data in support of the hypothesis that the effect of ubiquitin-proteasome pathway on metaphase-to-anaphase transition was mediated by regulating securin and Rec8 degradation in mouse and pig oocytes. In germinal vesicle-stage oocytes, immunostaining of securin was mainly localized in the germinal vesicle. Shortly after germinal vesicle breakdown, immunoreactive securin accumulated around the condensed chromosomes at prometaphase I. At metaphase I and metaphase II, when chromosomes were organized at the equatorial plate, immunoreactive securin was concentrated around the aligned chromosomes, putatively associated with the position of the metaphase spindle. The accumulation of securin could not be detected at anaphase I and anaphase II. In both mouse and pig oocytes, Western blot analysis showed that securin protein was low at germinal vesicle stage, reached the highest level at metaphase I, while decreased at anaphase I. Securin was increased again at metaphase II, while it was decreased at anaphase II. Rec8 protein was present in germinal vesicle-stage oocytes and remained until metaphase I, while it was decreased at anaphase I. Like securin, Rec8 was increased at metaphase II, while it was decreased again at anaphase II. The inhibition of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway inhibited the decrease in securin and Rec8 at metaphase-to-anaphase transitions in both mouse and pig oocytes. Microinjection of securin antibody into MII-arrested oocytes leads to the degradation of Rec8. In conclusion, these results suggest that the proteolysis of securin is dependent on ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and is necessary for the degradation of Rec8 during meiotic metaphase-to-anaphase transitions in mouse and pig oocytes.


Progress in Natural Science | 2004

Function and interaction of maturation-promoting factor and mitogen-activated protein kinase during meiotic maturation and fertilization of oocyte

Li-Jun Huo; Heng-Yu Fan; Da-Yuan Chen; Qing-Yuan Sun

Abstract Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) cascade and maturation-promoting factor (MPF) play very important roles during meiotic maturation and fertilization of oocyte. Interaction between MAP kinase and MPF influences meiotic maturation and fertilization of oocyte throughout the animal kingdom, including stimulation of germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD), suppression of DNA replication, control of meiotic chromosome segregation, maintenance of metaphase II arrest, and resumption and completion of second meiosis. This review focuses on the function and interaction of MAP kinase and MPF during meiotic maturation and fertilization of oocyte.


Endocrinology | 2005

Cyclic Adenosine 3′,5′-Monophosphate-Dependent Activation of Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase in Cumulus Cells Is Essential for Germinal Vesicle Breakdown of Porcine Cumulus-Enclosed Oocytes

Cheng-Guang Liang; Li-Jun Huo; Zhisheng Zhong; Da-Yuan Chen; Heide Schatten; Qing-Yuan Sun

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Da-Yuan Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qing-Yuan Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Heng-Yu Fan

Life Sciences Institute

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Cheng-Guang Liang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ling-Zhu Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiao-Qian Meng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qiang Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yi Hou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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