High cAMP attenuation of insulin-stimulated meiotic G2-M1 transition in zebrafish oocytes: Interaction between the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and the MAPK3/1 pathways

Sudipta Maitra, Debabrata Das, Pritha Ghosh, Sudip Hajra, Sib Sankar Roy, Samir Bhattacharya

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

High intra-cellular cyclic nucleotide (cAMP) ensures prophase-I arrest and prevent steroid-induced meiotic G2-M1 transition in full-grown oocytes; however, relatively less information is available for cAMP regulation of growth factor-stimulated signalling events in the oocyte model. Here using zebrafish oocytes, we show that priming with dibutyryl cAMP (dbcAMP) or cAMP modulators, e.g. adenylate cyclase activator, forskolin or phosphodiesterase inhibitors (IBMX/cilostamide) block insulin action on germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) and histone H1 kinase activation. Though high cAMP priming attenuates insulin-induced MAPK3/1 (ERK1/2) phosphorylation (activation), following 2. h of insulin stimulation it fails to block MAPK activation and GVBD. Further, insulin stimulation promotes down regulation of phospho-PKAc (inactivation) and PKA inhibition by H89/PKI-(6-22)-amide overcomes negative regulation by cAMP and induces GVBD and MAPK activation. Moreover, MEK1/2 inhibitor U0126 has no influence on H89-induced GVBD; however, it delays GVBD response in insulin-stimulated oocytes. MAPK activation by okadaic acid (OA) promotes GVBD; however, high dbcAMP abrogates OA action suggesting cross-talk between cAMP/PKA and MAPK-mediated signalling pathways may contribute significantly in maturing zebrafish oocyte.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)109-119
Number of pages11
JournalMolecular and cellular endocrinology
Volume393
Issue number1-2
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 5 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • CAMP/PKA
  • Insulin
  • MAPK (ERK1/2)
  • Okadaic acid
  • Oocyte
  • Zebrafish

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biochemistry
  • Molecular Biology
  • Endocrinology

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