Oocytes and hypoxanthine orchestrate the G2-M switch mechanism in ovarian granulosa cells
Author(s) -
Chengyu Li,
Xueqin Meng,
Shuo Liu,
Weijian Li,
Xue Zhang,
Jilong Zhou,
Yao Wang,
Chao Dong,
ZhaoJun Liu,
Jiaqi Zhou,
Juan Li,
Jingli Tao,
Wangjun Wu,
Ming Shen,
Honglin Liu
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.754
H-Index - 325
eISSN - 1477-9129
pISSN - 0950-1991
DOI - 10.1242/dev.184838
Subject(s) - biology , oocyte , follicular phase , microbiology and biotechnology , paracrine signalling , hypoxanthine , follicular fluid , mitosis , apoptosis , ovarian follicle , folliculogenesis , cell cycle , medicine , endocrinology , receptor , embryo , embryogenesis , biochemistry , enzyme
In mammalian growing follicles, oocytes are arrested at the diplotene stage (which resembles the G2/M boundary in mitosis), while the granulosa cells (GCs) continue to proliferate during follicular development, reflecting a cell cycle asynchrony between oocytes and GCs. Hypoxanthine (Hx), a purine present in the follicular fluid, has been shown to induce oocytes meiotic arrest, although its role in GC proliferation remains ill-defined. Here, we demonstrate that Hx indiscriminately prevents G2-to-M phase transition in porcine GCs. However, oocyte-derived paracrine factors (ODPFs), particularly GDF9 and BMP15, maintain the proliferation of GCs, partly by activating the ERK1/2 signaling and enabling the G2/M transition that is suppressed by Hx. Interestingly, GCs with lower expression of GDF9/BMP15 receptors appear to be more sensitive to Hx-induced G2/M arrest and become easily detached from the follicular wall. Importantly, Hx-mediated inhibition of G2/M progression instigates GC apoptosis, which is ameliorated in the presence of GDF9 and/or BMP15. Therefore, our data indicate that the counterbalance of intrafollicular factors, particularly Hx and oocyte-derived GDF9/BMP15, fine-tunes the development of porcine follicles by regulating the cell cycle progression of GCs.
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