Calcium transients during early development in single starfish (Asterias forbesi) oocytes

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Abstract

Maturation and fertilization of the starfish oocytes are putative calcium-dependent events. We have investigated the spatial distribution and temporal dynamics of this calcium dependence in single oocytes of Asterias forbesi. We used the calcium photoprotein, aequorin, in conjunction with a microscope-photomultiplier and microscope-image intensifier. Surprisingly, in contrast to earlier work with Marasthenias glacialis, there is no detectable increase in intracellular-free calcium in the oocyte of A. forbesi in response to the maturation hormone 1-methyl adenine. During fertilization of the same, matured, A. forbesi oocyte there is a large increase in intracellular-free calcium. The calcium concentration increases to ~ 1 μM at the point of insemination and the region of elvated free calcium expands across the oocyte in ~ 20 s (17-19°C). After the entire oocyte reaches an elevated concentration of free calcium, the concentration decreases uniformly throughout the oocyte over the next several minutes.

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Eisen, A., & Reynolds, G. T. (1984). Calcium transients during early development in single starfish (Asterias forbesi) oocytes. Journal of Cell Biology, 99(5), 1878–1882. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.99.5.1878

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