Stem-loop binding protein accumulates during oocyte maturation and is not cell-cycle-regulated in the early mouse embryo.
2002
The stem-loop binding protein (SLBP) binds to the 3′ end of histone
mRNA and participates in 3′-processing of the newly synthesized
transcripts, which protects them from degradation, and probably also promotes
their translation. In proliferating cells, translation of SLBP mRNA begins at
G1/S and the protein is degraded following DNA replication. These
post-transcriptional mechanisms closely couple SLBP expression to S-phase of
the cell cycle, and play a key role in restricting synthesis of
replication-dependent histones to S-phase. In contrast to somatic cells,
replication-dependent histone mRNAs accumulate and are translated
independently of DNA replication in oocytes and early embryos. We report here
that SLBP expression and activity also differ in mouse oocytes and early
embryos compared with somatic cells. SLBP is present in oocytes that are
arrested at prophase of G2/M, where it is concentrated in the nucleus. Upon
entry into M-phase of meiotic maturation, SLBP begins to accumulate rapidly,
reaching a very high level in mature oocytes arrested at metaphase II.
Following fertilization, SLBP remains abundant in the nucleus and the
cytoplasm throughout the first cell cycle, including both G1 and G2 phases. It
declines during the second and third cell cycles, reaching a relatively low
level by the late 4-cell stage. SLBP can bind the histone mRNA-stem-loop at
all stages of the cell cycle in oocytes and early embryos, and it is the only
stem-loop binding activity detectable in these cells. We also report that SLBP
becomes phosphorylated rapidly following entry into M-phase of meiotic
maturation through a mechanism that is sensitive to roscovitine, an inhibitor
of cyclin-dependent kinases. SLBP is rapidly dephosphorylated following
fertilization or parthenogenetic activation, and becomes newly phosphorylated
at M-phase of mitosis. Phosphorylation does not affect its stem-loop binding
activity. These results establish that, in contrast to Xenopus , mouse
oocytes and embryos contain a single SLBP. Expression of SLBP is uncoupled
from S-phase in oocytes and early embryos, which indicates that the mechanisms
that impose cell-cycle-regulated expression of SLBP in somatic cells do not
operate in oocytes or during the first embryonic cell cycle. This distinctive
pattern of SLBP expression may be required for accumulation of histone
proteins required for sperm chromatin remodelling and assembly of newly
synthesized embryonic DNA into chromatin.
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