The ability of human metaphase-II arrested eggs to activate following fertilisation declines with advancing maternal age. Egg activation is triggered by repetitive increases in intracellular Ca 2+ concentration ([Ca 2+[ i) in the ooplasm as a result of sperm-egg fusion. We therefore hypothesised that eggs from older females feature a reduced ability to mount appropriate Ca 2+ responses at fertilisation. To test this hypothesis we performed the first examination of Ca 2+ dynamics in eggs from young and naturally-aged mice. Strikingly, we find that Ca 2+ stores and resting [Ca 2+[ i are unchanged with age. Although eggs from aged mice feature a reduced ability to replenish intracellular Ca 2+ stores following depletion, this difference had no effect on the duration, number, or amplitude of Ca 2+ oscillations following intracytoplasmic sperm injection or expression of phospholipase C zeta. In contrast, we describe a substantial reduction in the frequency and duration of oscillations in aged eggs upon parthenogenetic activation with SrCl2. We conclude that the ability to mount and respond to an appropriate Ca 2+ signal at fertilisation is largely unchanged by advancing maternal age, but subtle changes in Ca 2+ handling occur that may have more substantial impacts upon commonly used means of parthenogenetic activation.
CITATION STYLE
Haverfield, J., Nakagawa, S., Love, D., Tsichlaki, E., Nomikos, M., Lai, F. A., … Fitzharris, G. (2016). Ca2+dynamics in oocytes from naturally-aged mice. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep19357
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