Voltage-dependent activation of frog eggs by a sperm surface disintegrin peptide

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Abstract

Fertilin, a sperm protein of the metalloprotease/disintegrin/cysteine- rich (MDC) family, plays a critical role in sperm-egg binding in mammals. Peptides corresponding to the disintegrin domain of fertilin and antibodies against fertilin have been shown to inhibit mammalian sperm-egg binding and fusion. A protein from the same family, xMDC16, was recently cloned from frog (Xenopus laevis) testis and was found to be involved in frog sperm-egg binding. Here we report that xMDC16 is localized predominantly on the posterior surface of egg jelly-activated sperm, and peptides from the disintegrin domain of this protein activate eggs when applied near the egg surface. Egg activation was dependent on (1) specific amino acid residues (KTX); (2) the presence of divalent cations, but not external Ca2+ alone; and (3) voltage across the egg plasma membrane. This is the first demonstration of egg activation in vertebrates by the surface application of a peptide derived from a sperm surface protein, supporting a model for egg activation that involves a signal transducing receptor for sperm in the egg's plasma membrane.

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Shilling, F. M., Magie, C. R., & Nuccitelli, R. (1998). Voltage-dependent activation of frog eggs by a sperm surface disintegrin peptide. Developmental Biology, 202(1), 113–124. https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.1998.8982

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