|
FROM
OOCYTE TO ZYGOTE VIA THE ER
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
BOSTON (May 16, 1997)- The endoplasmic reticulum plays an hitherto
unsuspected role in the transformation of oocytes into embryos, report
Harvard researchers.
The new findings will help unravel one of the persistent questions in
embryology, namely, how does a perfectly
symmetrical oocyte go about differentiating and forming an asymmetric
organism with head, tail, front back and so on? The Harvard researchers
now report that the necessary RNA molecules for forming the organism are
directed through the endoplasmic reticulum, in association with an endoplasmic
reticulum-associated protein called Vera (VgLE binding and endoplasmic
reticulum association).
Embryologists have long observed the asymmetric localization of RNA
in oocytes. Even before fertilization, the oocyte sorts its RNA and strategically
places RNAs that encode particular genes. The oocyte is primed to begin
differentiating as soon as it it fertilized and becomes a zygote.
In studies with frog (Xenopus laevis) oocytes, Bruce Schnapp and colleagues
found that an RNA encoding a growth factor called Vg1 migrates to the "bottom,"
or vegetal pole, of the egg. After fertilization and several cell divisions,
this RNA becomes restricted to cells in the vegetal area, and the Vg1 protein
made from this RNA then signals the overlying cells to turn into mesoderm,
one of the embryo's three germ layers.
To prove that this protein was indeed necessary for RNA localization,
the scientists pinpointed the exact spots in the RNA that recognized the
protein, created mutants that were defective in these spots, and then demonstrated
that when the RNA no longer bound the protein, it also no longer headed
for the bottom of the egg.
This is the first experiment to make the connection between a protein
and the mechanism of RNA localization. The researchers were surprised to
find that the protein was loosely associated with the endoplasmic reticulum,
the organelle better known for its role in protein synthesis. This specialized
type of endoplasmic reticulum forms when the Vg1 RNA begins it migration
to the cell's bottom.
Schnapp speculates that the new protein- dubbed vera for Vg1 ER associated
protein, somehow hooks up Vg1 RNA with this specialized ER, which then
travels along microtubules to the vegetal pole, taking the RNA along for
the ride.
The exact function of vera is still unknown, he cautions. Like much
early work that opens new research avenues, this study raises more questions
than it answers. But at least scientists now have a handle on how to study
the problem. "Before, there was no way in which one could think about the
mechanism. It was completely murky," says Schnapp.
He hopes vera will lead him to novel machinery the cell uses to transport
RNA. His colleagues are following up on hints that there may be many more
proteins, even a new cellular particle, involved in this process.
These findings also underscore the importance of basic biological research,
Schnapp notes, adding that is becoming incresingly difficult to secure
federal funding for this kind of work. As was the case with many fundamental
discoveries in cell biology, there was no prior data suggesting a specific
hypothesis that should be tested-the standard approach taken in most grant
proposals. "This work finally self-assembled out of five years of exploration.
It came out of thin air," Schnapp says.
The work appears in the May 16, 1997 issue of Science.
Related information on the Internet
Dr. Schnapp's
Home Page
AE: Xenopus laevis,
the Frog Prince
AE
Activity: Embryology
AE:
Genetics of Pattern Development
AE: Embryonic
Signal War
|
|