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1 August 2000 A Role for the MEK-MAPK Pathway in Okadaic Acid-Induced Meiotic Resumption of Incompetent Growing Mouse Oocytes
Corinne de Vantéry Arrighi, Aldo Campana, Sabine Schorderet-Slatkine
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Abstract

Fully grown competent mouse oocytes spontaneously resume meiosis in vitro when released from their follicular environment, in contrast to growing incompetent oocytes, which remain blocked in prophase I. The cell cycle regulators, maturation promoting factor (MPF; [p34cdc2/cyclin B kinase]) and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases (p42MAPK and p44MAPK), are implicated in meiotic competence acquisition. Incompetent oocytes contain levels of p42MAPK, p44MAPK, and cyclin B proteins that are comparable to those in competent oocytes, but their level of p34cdc2 is markedly lower. Okadaic acid (OA), an inhibitor of phosphatases 1 and 2A, induces meiotic resumption of incompetent oocytes. The kinetics and the percentage of germinal vesicle breakdown depends on whether or not oocytes have been cultured before OA treatment. We show that the fast kinetics and the high percentage of germinal vesicle breakdown induced by OA following 2 days in culture is neither the result of an accumulation of p34cdc2 protein, nor to the activation of MPF in incompetent oocytes, but rather by the premature activation of MAP kinases. Indeed, a specific inhibitor of MAPK kinase (MEK) activity, PD98059, inhibits activation of MAP kinases and meiotic resumption. Altogether, these results indicate that the MEK-MAPK pathway is implicated in OA-induced meiotic resumption of incompetent mouse oocytes, and that the MEK-MAPK pathway can induce meiotic resumption in the absence of MPF activation.

Corinne de Vantéry Arrighi, Aldo Campana, and Sabine Schorderet-Slatkine "A Role for the MEK-MAPK Pathway in Okadaic Acid-Induced Meiotic Resumption of Incompetent Growing Mouse Oocytes," Biology of Reproduction 63(2), 658-665, (1 August 2000). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod63.2.658
Received: 27 September 1999; Accepted: 1 March 2000; Published: 1 August 2000
KEYWORDS
kinases
meiosis
oocyte development
phosphatases
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