Publication | Open Access
MARKED DECREASE IN THE RIGIDITY OF STARFISH OOCYTES INDUCED BY 1-METHYLADENINE1
68
Citations
22
References
1980
Year
OocyteEngineeringExperimental BiologyCellular PhysiologyEmbryologyExtreme RigidityMatrix BiologyCell PhysiologyAnimal PhysiologyMechanobiologyMolecular PhysiologyMorphogenesisCell BiomechanicsEmbryonic DevelopmentOrganogenesisMarked StiffnessCell BiologyCytochalasin BChromatinDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyCell MotilityCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Extreme rigidity of immature starfish oocytes as measured by compression method was found to decline during the early phase of their maturation when induced by 1-methyladenine (1-MeAde). The onset of this decrease in stiffness occurred within 5 to 9 min of 1-MeAde treatment, well before the breakdown of the germinal vesicle, progressively declining to reach a minimum stiffness after 20 min. Dithiothreitol, known as an artificial maturation-inducing agent, caused a similar change. The stiffness is thus expected to serve as a quantitative indicator of the early process of cytoplasmic events, which would induce the breakdown of the germinal vesicle. Cytochalasin B (3 μg/ml) also reduced the stiffness, but unlike the former two agents, the effect was reversible, and did not interfere with the process of maturation. Due to the effect of cytochalasin B, it became possible to enucleate immature oocytes by centrifugal force. Non-nucleate fragments thus obtained still maintained their marked stiffness, which was decreased by the action of 1-MeAde, with a time-course similar to that of intact oocytes.
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