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Mol. Hum. Reprod. Advance Access originally published online on April 29, 2005
Molecular Human Reproduction 2005 11(5):335-344; doi:10.1093/molehr/gah171
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Molecular Human Reproduction © The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions{at}oupjournals.org

Cytoplasmic fragmentation in activated eggs occurs in the cytokinetic phase of the cell cycle, in lieu of normal cytokinesis, and in response to cytoskeletal disorder

Mina Alikani1,2,3, Tim Schimmel2 and Steen M. Willadsen2

1Institute of Reproduction and Development, Monash University, Clayton, Australia and 2Tyho-Galileo Research Laboratories, 101 Old Short Hills Road, Suite 501, West Orange, NJ 07052, USA

3 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Email: mina.alikani{at}embryos.net

The timing of cytoplasmic fragmentation in relation to the cell cycle was studied in mature oocytes and early cleavage stages using mouse oocytes and embryos as experimental models. The central approach was to remove the nuclear apparatus, in whole or in part, from non-activated and activated oocytes and early embryos, and follow their response during subsequent culture in vitro. Oocytes arrested in metaphase of the second meiotic division did not fragment following complete removal of the meiotic apparatus, provided they were not subsequently activated. Exposure of spindle-chromosome-complex-depleted oocytes to activation conditions immediately after enucleation led to fragmentation, although not until control embryos entered first mitosis. Delaying activation until 24 h post-enucleation led to earlier fragmentation. Enucleation of normally fertilized or artificially activated oocytes after emission of the second polar body also led to fragmentation coinciding with the first mitosis in nucleated control embryos. However, if artificially activated oocytes were prevented from completing second meiosis, by exposure to cytochalasin, and then enucleated, this universal wave of fragmentation was preceded in some cytoplasts by limited fragmentation after just a few hours in culture, and coinciding with completion of meiosis II in nucleated oocytes. Fragmentation also occurred in the second mitotic cell cycle, but it was limited to blastomeres of fertilized oocytes that were enucleated in late interphase. These results indicate that fragmentation in oocytes and early embryos, though seemingly uncoordinated, is a precisely timed event that occurs only in mitotically active cells, during the cytokinetic phase of the cell cycle, in lieu of normal cytokinesis, and in response to altered cytoskeletal organization.

Key words: cytokinesis/cytoplasmic fragmentation/cytoskeleton/enucleation/mitosis


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