1. Cytokeratin intermediate filament organisation and dynamics in the vegetal cortex of livingXenopus laevisoocytes and eggs
- Author
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Emma J. Clarke and Victoria J. Allan
- Subjects
Male ,Cytoplasm ,Reticulocytes ,Microinjections ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Immunoblotting ,Intermediate Filaments ,Xenopus ,macromolecular substances ,Biology ,Transfection ,Microtubules ,Antibodies ,Protein filament ,Xenopus laevis ,Cytokeratin ,Oogenesis ,Structural Biology ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Cytoskeleton ,Intermediate filament ,Metaphase ,Cells, Cultured ,Ovum ,Staining and Labeling ,Cell Biology ,Oocyte ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,Kinetics ,Luminescent Proteins ,Protein Transport ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Fertilization ,Larva ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Oocytes ,Keratins ,Female ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Cytokeratin intermediate filaments are prominent constituents of developing Xenopus oocytes and eggs, forming radial and cortical networks. In order to investigate the dynamics of the cortical cytokeratin network, we expressed EGFP-tagged Xenopus cytokeratin 1(8) in oocytes and eggs. The EGFP-cytokeratin co-assembled with endogenous partner cytokeratin proteins to form fluorescent filaments. Using time-lapse confocal microscopy, cytokeratin filament assembly was monitored in live Xenopus oocytes at different stages of oogenesis, and in the artificially-activated mature egg during the first cell cycle. In stage III to V oocytes, cytokeratin proteins formed a loose cortical geodesic network, which became more tightly bundled in stage VI oocytes. Maturation of oocytes into metaphase II-arrested eggs induced disassembly of the EGFP-cytokeratin network. Imaging live eggs after artificial activation allowed us to observe the reassembly of cytokeratin filaments in the vegetal cortex. The earliest observable structures were loose foci, which then extended into curly filament bundles. The position and orientation of these bundles altered with time, suggesting that forces were acting upon them. During cortical rotation, the cytokeratin network realigned into a parallel array that translocated in a directed manner at 5 μm/minute, relative to stationary cortex. The cytokeratin filaments are, therefore, moving in association with the bulk cytoplasm of the egg, suggesting that they may provide a structural role at the moving interface between cortex and cytoplasm. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 56:13–26, 2003. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2003