- Title
- Changing expression and subcellular distribution of karyopherins during murine oogenesis
- Creator
- Mihalas, Bettina P.; Western, Patrick S.; Loveland, Kate L.; McLaughlin, Eileen A.; Holt, Janet E.
- Relation
- ARC .DP110100418, ARC DP120100946, ARC DE120101242 & NHMRC 1079646 http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DE120101242
- Relation
- Reproduction Vol. 150, Issue 6, p. 485-496
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-14-0585
- Publisher
- BioScientifica
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2015
- Description
- Mammalian oocyte growth and development is driven by a strict program of gene expression that relies on the timely presence of transcriptional regulators via nuclear pores. By targeting specific cargos for nucleo-cytoplasmic transport, karyopherin (KPN) proteins are key to the relocation of essential transcription factors and chromatin-remodelling factors into and out of the nucleus. Using multiple complementary techniques, here we establish that KPNA genes and proteins are dynamically expressed and relocalised throughout mouse oogenesis and folliculogenesis. Of the KPNAs examined (Kpna1, Kpna2, Kpna3, Kpna4, Kpna6, Kpna7, Kpnb1, Ipo5 and Xpo1), all were expressed in the embryonic ovary with up-regulation of protein levels concomitant with meiotic entry for KPNA2, accompanied by the redistribution of the cellular localisation of KPNA2 and XPO1. In contrast, postnatal folliculogenesis revealed significant up-regulation of Kpna1, Kpna2, Kpna4, Kpna6 and Ipo5 and down-regulation of Kpnb1, Kpna7 and Xpo1 at the primordial to primary follicle transition. KPNAs exhibited different localisation patterns in both oocytes and granulosa cells during folliculogenesis, with three KPNAs – KPNA1, KPNA2 and IPO5 – displaying marked enrichment in the nucleus by antral follicle stage. Remarkably, varied subcellular expression profiles were also identified in isolated pre-ovulatory oocytes with KPNAs KPNA2, KPNB1 and IPO5 detected in the cytoplasm and at the nuclear rim and XPO1 in cytoplasmic aggregates. Intriguingly, meiotic spindle staining was also observed for KPNB1 and XPO1 in meiosis II eggs, implying roles for KPNAs outside of nucleo-cytoplasmic transport. Thus, we propose that KPNAs, by targeting specific cargoes, are likely to be key regulators of oocyte development.
- Subject
- karyopherin (KPN) proteins; KPNA genes; oogenesis; folliculogenesis; mammalian oocyte growth
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1314043
- Identifier
- uon:22692
- Identifier
- ISSN:1470-1626
- Language
- eng
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