Fertilized eggs must """"""""activate"""""""" for development to begin. For example, activation is needed to block polyspermy, resume meiosis and start embryo mitosis. Although activation is critical for fertility, little is known about its control apart from a key role for calcium. The powerful genetics of Drosophila permits efficient discovery of new regulators of activation and detailed dissection of the pathways through which they act.
The first Aim i nvestigates the regulatory cascades that control activation. Our in vitro and genetic data show that calcium, via at least one conserved signaling pathway, mediates activation in Drosophila. We will test whether two other important transducers of calcium signals are also required for activation. To """"""""flesh out"""""""" the pathways that regulate activation, we will determine the molecular identity of two new genes whose mutants fail to activate. We will explore how these and other molecularly-identified genes interact with each other, and with calcium signaling, to cause activation. We will follow up our findings that the activity of MAPK, a major signaling kinase, drops during activation, and that activation makes the egg cytoplasm competent to organize the male pronucleus.
The second Aim focuses on events set in motion by activation. We investigate YA, one of the few proteins known to act in these events. YA associate with chromatin and with the nuclear lamina, to permit mitosis by coordinating the cell cycles of the pronuclei. We will determine whether YA acts only immediately after activation. We will identify histone- and chromatin- protein modifications in pronuclei entering mitosis, and YA's effect on these modifications. We will identify the nature and actions of YA's nuclear partners. YA is dephosphorylated upon egg activation, and as a result enters nuclei. This strongly suggests that activation causes changes in protein phosphorylation and activity. We will test this hypothesis by determining how activation changes the phosphorylation state of the proteome. We will identify the functions of selected proteins whose phosphorylation state is regulated by activation.

Public Health Relevance

""""""""Activating"""""""" a fertilized egg to begin development is essential for fertility. Knowing the molecules and functions that control egg activation is important for diagnosing early infertilities and improving the efficiency of assisted reproductive technologies. We found that the control of egg activation is similar in Drosophila fruit flies and mammals. Thus, we exploit the powerful genetics of Drosophila to elucidate efficiently the molecules and gene pathways needed to start development in humans. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM044659-17
Application #
7414382
Study Section
Cellular, Molecular and Integrative Reproduction Study Section (CMIR)
Program Officer
Haynes, Susan R
Project Start
1991-05-01
Project End
2011-04-30
Budget Start
2008-05-01
Budget End
2009-04-30
Support Year
17
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$279,644
Indirect Cost
Name
Cornell University
Department
Biochemistry
Type
Schools of Earth Sciences/Natur
DUNS #
872612445
City
Ithaca
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
14850
Cui, Jun; Lai, Yun Wei; Sartain, Caroline V et al. (2016) The Drosophila prage Gene, Required for Maternal Transcript Destabilization in Embryos, Encodes a Predicted RNA Exonuclease. G3 (Bethesda) 6:1687-93
Kaneuchi, Taro; Wolfner, Mariana F; Aigaki, Toshiro (2015) A calcium rise occurs as activating Drosophila eggs move through the female reproductive tract. Mol Reprod Dev 82:501
Kaneuch, Taro; Wolfner, Mariana F; Aigaki, Toshiro (2015) A calcium rise occurs as activating Drosophila eggs move through the female reproductive tract. Mol Reprod Dev 82:501
Kaneuchi, Taro; Sartain, Caroline V; Takeo, Satomi et al. (2015) Calcium waves occur as Drosophila oocytes activate. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 112:791-6
Cui, Jun; Sartain, Caroline V; Pleiss, Jeffrey A et al. (2013) Cytoplasmic polyadenylation is a major mRNA regulator during oogenesis and egg activation in Drosophila. Dev Biol 383:121-31
Krauchunas, Amber R; Wolfner, Mariana F (2013) Molecular changes during egg activation. Curr Top Dev Biol 102:267-92
Sartain, Caroline V; Wolfner, Mariana F (2013) Calcium and egg activation in Drosophila. Cell Calcium 53:10-5
Krauchunas, Amber R; Sackton, Katharine L; Wolfner, Mariana F (2013) Phospho-regulation pathways during egg activation in Drosophila melanogaster. Genetics 195:171-80
Krauchunas, Amber R; Horner, Vanessa L; Wolfner, Mariana F (2012) Protein phosphorylation changes reveal new candidates in the regulation of egg activation and early embryogenesis in D. melanogaster. Dev Biol 370:125-34
Sartain, Caroline V; Wolfner, Mariana F (2012) The spermatid individualization complex of Drosophila melanogaster. Mol Reprod Dev 79:367

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