992 research outputs found

    Chemotaxis of Arbacia punctulata spermatozoa to resact, a peptide from the egg jelly layer

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    Resact, a peptide of known sequence isolated from the jelly layer of Arbacia punctulata eggs, is a potent chemoattractant for A. punctulata spermatozoa. The chemotactic response is concentration dependent, is abolished by pretreatment of the spermatozoa with resact, and shows an absolute requirement for millimolar external calcium. A. punctulata spermatozoa do not respond to speract, a peptide isolated from the jelly layer of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs. This is the first report of animal sperm chemotaxis in response to a defined egg-derived molecule

    Instrument far measuring terrestrial heat flow through the ocean floor

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    Terrestrial heat flow through the ocean floor is determined by measuring the temperature gradient and thermal conductivity in the upper few meters of sediment with an instrument lowered on hydrographic wire. The chief novel feature of the device is that the thermal conductivity is measured in situ simultaneously with the temperature gradient instead of in a cored specimen of sediment in the laboratory

    Evidence for a secretory pathway Ca2+-ATPase in sea urchin spermatozoa

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    AbstractPlasma membrane, sarco-endoplasmic reticulum and secretory pathway Ca2+-ATPases (designated PMCA, SERCA and SPCA) regulate intracellular Ca2+ in animal cells. The presence of PMCA, and the absence of SERCA, in sea urchin sperm is known. By using inhibitors of Ca2+-ATPases, we now show the presence of SPCA and Ca2+ store in sea urchin sperm, which refills by SPCA-type pumps. Immunofluorescence shows SPCA localizes to the mitochondrion. Ca2+ measurements reveal that ∼75% of Ca2+ extrusion is by Ca2+ ATPases and 25% by Na+ dependent Ca2+ exchanger/s. Bisphenol, a Ca2+ ATPase inhibitor, completely blocks the acrosome reaction, indicating the importance of Ca2+-ATPases in fertilization

    Rapid evolution of fertilization selectivity and lysin cDNA sequences in Teguline gastropods

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    Proteins mediating intercellular recognition face opposing selective forces as they evolve: purifying selection to maintain function, and diversifying selection to alter specificity. Lysin is a 16-kDa protein which enables sperm of free-spawning marine snails to make a hole in the vitelline layer (VE) surrounding conspecific eggs. Previous work on abalone (Haliotis spp.) has shown that positive selection promotes rapid interspecific divergence of lysin. Here, we present data on the specificity of VE dissolution by four species of teguline gastropods, along with lysin cDNA sequences. The teguline and abalone lineages diverged over 250 MYA. As in abalone, VE dissolution by lysin in tegulines is species-selective, and positive selection promotes rapid interspecific divergence over the entire mature protein. Nonsynonymous substitution rates, calculated using a mtCOI molecular clock calibrated by two Tegula species separated by the Isthmus of Panama, are high (\u3e25 substitutions per site per 109 years). However, the extensive replacements in teguline lysins are overwhelmingly conservative with respect to type, charge, and polarity of residues. Predictions of secondary structure suggest that the size and position of α-helices are also conserved, even through pairwise amino acid identities between Haliotis rufescens and the different tegulines are less than 15%

    Sainte-Enimie – Le tumulus du Devez Viel

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    Date de l'opération : 1991 - 1992 (SU) ; 1993 (SU) Inventeur(s) : Fages Gilbert (SRA) ; Vacquier Jacques Sur le causse de Sauveterre et au nord-est du hameau du même nom, le site archéologique du Devez Viel occupe l’aire sommitale d’une croupe dominante. L’altitude du replat supérieur est comprise entre 1 010 m et 1 050 m. Cette sorte de petit plateau est structuré par deux modelés karstiques (sotch) distants d’une centaine de mètres. Il livre en surface quelques tessons érodés et des pièces ..
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