Procaine Induces Cytokinesis in Horse Oocytes via a pH Dependent Mechanism

Publication date

2015-07-01

Authors

Leemans, BartISNI 0000000492904962
Gadella, B.M.ISNI 0000000395892373
Stout, T.A.E.ORCID 0000-0001-5321-8095ISNI 0000000387838262
Heras, Sonia
Smits, Katrien
Ferrer-Buitrago, Minerva
Claes, Eline
Heindryckx, Bjorn
De Vos, Winnok H.
Nelis, Hilde

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Co-incubating equine gametes in the presence of procaine has been reported to facilitate in vitro fertilization, with cleavage rates exceeding 60%. We report that, while procaine does trigger sperm hyperactivation, it independently induces cleavage of equine oocytes. First, we found that procaine (1-5 mM) did not facilitate stallion sperm penetration of equine oocytes, but instead induced sperm-independent oocyte cytokinesis in the absence of the second polar body extrusion. Indeed, 56 ± 4% of oocytes cleaved within 2.5 d of exposure to 2.5 mM procaine, irrespective of sperm presence. However, the cleaved oocytes did not develop beyond 8-16 cells, and the daughter cells either lacked nuclei or contained aberrant, condensed DNA fragments. By contrast, intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) was followed by second polar body extrusion and formation of normal blastocysts. Moreover, neither the calcium oscillations detectable using fura-2 AM staining nor the cortical granule reaction visualized by LCA-FITC staining, after oocyte activation induced by ICSI or ionomycin treatment, were detected after exposing oocytes to 2.5 mM procaine. Instead, procaine initiated an ooplasmic alkalinization, detectable by BCECF-AM staining, that was not observed after other treatments. This alkalinization was followed, after an additional 18 h incubation, by cortical F-actin depolymerization, as demonstrated by reduced actin phalloidin-FITC staining intensity, that resembled preparation for cytokinesis in ICSI-fertilized zygotes. Overall, we conclude that procaine induces cytokinesis in equine oocytes accompanied by aberrant chromatin condensation and division; this explains why embryos produced after exposing equine oocytes to procaine fail to develop beyond the 8-16 cell stage.

Keywords

Cytokinesis, Equids (horses, donkeys, zebras), in vitro fertilization (IVF), pH, Procaine, Taverne

Citation

Leemans, B, Gadella, B M, Stout, T A E, Heras, S, Smits, K, Ferrer-Buitrago, M, Claes, E, Heindryckx, B, De Vos, W H, Nelis, H, Hoogewijs, M & Van Soom, A 2015, 'Procaine Induces Cytokinesis in Horse Oocytes via a pH Dependent Mechanism', Biology of Reproduction, vol. 93, no. 1, 23, pp. 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.114.127423