5 research outputs found
EGF Receptor Kinase Activity Is Required For Gap Junction Closure And For Part Of The Decrease In Ovarian Follicle cGMP In Response To Luteinizing Hormone
The meiotic cell cycle in mouse oocytes is arrested in prophase, and then restarted when luteinizing hormone (LH) acts on the surrounding granulosa cells. The granulosa cells keep meiosis arrested by providing a source of cGMP that diffuses into the oocyte through gap junctions, and LH restarts the cell cycle by closing the junctions and by decreasing granulosa cell cGMP, thus lowering oocyte cGMP. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) activation is an essential step in triggering LH-induced meiotic resumption, but its relationship to the cGMP decrease in the follicle is incompletely understood, and its possible function in causing gap junction closure has not been investigated. Here we use EGFR agonists (epiregulin and amphiregulin), and an EGFR kinase inhibitor (AG1478) to study the function of the EGFR in the signaling pathways leading to the release of oocytes from prophase arrest. Our results indicate that the EGFR kinase contributes to LH-induced meiotic resumption in two different ways. First, it is required for gap junction closure. Second, it is required for an essential component of the decrease in follicle cGMP. Our data show that the EGFR kinase-dependent component of the cGMP decrease is required for LH-induced meiotic resumption, but they also indicate that an as yet unidentified pathway accounts for a large part of the cGMP decrease
EGF Receptor Kinase Activity Is Required For Gap Junction Closure And For Part Of The Decrease In Ovarian Follicle cGMP In Response To Luteinizing Hormone
The meiotic cell cycle in mouse oocytes is arrested in prophase, and then restarted when luteinizing hormone (LH) acts on the surrounding granulosa cells. The granulosa cells keep meiosis arrested by providing a source of cGMP that diffuses into the oocyte through gap junctions, and LH restarts the cell cycle by closing the junctions and by decreasing granulosa cell cGMP, thus lowering oocyte cGMP. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) activation is an essential step in triggering LH-induced meiotic resumption, but its relationship to the cGMP decrease in the follicle is incompletely understood, and its possible function in causing gap junction closure has not been investigated. Here we use EGFR agonists (epiregulin and amphiregulin), and an EGFR kinase inhibitor (AG1478) to study the function of the EGFR in the signaling pathways leading to the release of oocytes from prophase arrest. Our results indicate that the EGFR kinase contributes to LH-induced meiotic resumption in two different ways. First, it is required for gap junction closure. Second, it is required for an essential component of the decrease in follicle cGMP. Our data show that the EGFR kinase-dependent component of the cGMP decrease is required for LH-induced meiotic resumption, but they also indicate that an as yet unidentified pathway accounts for a large part of the cGMP decrease
Cyclic GMP from the surrounding somatic cells regulates cyclic AMP and meiosis in the mouse oocyte
Mammalian oocytes are arrested in meiotic prophase by an inhibitory signal
from the surrounding somatic cells in the ovarian follicle. In response to
luteinizing hormone (LH), which binds to receptors on the somatic cells, the
oocyte proceeds to second metaphase, where it can be fertilized. Here we
investigate how the somatic cells regulate the prophase-to-metaphase
transition in the oocyte, and show that the inhibitory signal from the somatic
cells is cGMP. Using FRET-based cyclic nucleotide sensors in follicle-enclosed
mouse oocytes, we find that cGMP passes through gap junctions into the oocyte,
where it inhibits the hydrolysis of cAMP by the phosphodiesterase PDE3A. This
inhibition maintains a high concentration of cAMP and thus blocks meiotic
progression. LH reverses the inhibitory signal by lowering cGMP levels in the
somatic cells (from ∼2 μM to ∼80 nM at 1 hour after LH stimulation)
and by closing gap junctions between the somatic cells. The resulting decrease
in oocyte cGMP (from ∼1 μM to ∼40 nM) relieves the inhibition of
PDE3A, increasing its activity by ∼5-fold. This causes a decrease in
oocyte cAMP (from ∼700 nM to ∼140 nM), leading to the resumption of
meiosis