The first frog egg extract was reported in 1983 by Lohka and Masui.[1] This pioneering work used eggs of the Northern leopard frogRana pipiens to prepare an extract. Later, the same procedure was applied to eggs of Xenopus laevis, becoming popular for studying cell cycle progression and cell cycle-dependent cellular events.[2] Extracts derived from eggs of the Japanese common toadBufo japonicus[3] or of the Western clawed frogXenopus tropicalis[4] have also been reported.
Basics of extract preparation
The cell cycle of unfertilized eggs of X. laevis is arrested highly synchronously at metaphase of meiosis II. Upon fertilization, the metaphase arrest is released by the action of Ca2+ ions released from the endoplasmic reticulum, thereby initiating early embryonic cell cycles that alternates S phase (DNA replication) and M phase (mitosis).[5]
M phase extract
Unfertilized eggs in a buffer containing the Ca2+ chelatorEGTA (ethylene glycol tetraacetic acid) are packed into a centrifuge tube. After removing excess buffer, the eggs are crushed by centrifugation (~10,000 g). A soluble fraction that appears between the lipid cap and the yolk is called an M phase extract. This extract contains a high level of cyclin B-Cdk1. When demembranated sperm nuclei are incubated with this extract, it undergoes a series of structural changes and is eventually converted into a set of M phase chromosomes with bipolar spindles.
More recently, the egg extracts have been used to study reprogramming of differentiated nuclei,[17] physical properties of spindles[18] and nuclei,[19] and theoretical understanding of cell cycle control.[20]
^Ohsumi K, Katagiri C (1991). "Characterization of the ooplasmic factor inducing decondensation of and protamine removal from toad sperm nuclei: involvement of nucleoplasmin". Dev. Biol. 148 (1): 295–305. doi:10.1016/0012-1606(91)90338-4. PMID1936566.
^Görlich D, Prehn S, Laskey RA, Hartmann E (1994). "Isolation of a protein that is essential for the first step of nuclear protein import". Cell. 79 (5): 767–778. doi:10.1016/0092-8674(94)90067-1. PMID8001116. S2CID7539929.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)