The use of sea urchin eggs as a model to investigate the effects of crassolide, a diterpene isolated from a soft coral

Toxicol In Vitro. 1991;5(5-6):395-401. doi: 10.1016/0887-2333(91)90060-q.

Abstract

Crassolide, a monocyclic diterpene isolated and purified from the soft coral Lobophytum crassum, inhibited the cell cleavage of sea urchin eggs without affecting fertilization. The effect was observed with concentrations above 2 x 10(-5)m in egg suspensions. Addition of crassolide between 5 and 40 min post-fertilization totally blocked the first cleavage, which in the control occurs 1 hr after fertilization. When added between 50 and 60 min post-fertilization, crassolide produced polynucleated cells in embryos. Crassolide did not affect the egg permeability to Na(+) and Ca(2+), but caused an increase of 0.2 units in the intracellular pH of fertilized eggs coupled with a proton efflux. Crassolide, which does not affect Ca(2+) influx or permeability at the level of storage in reticular vesicles, could be used as a negative control when analysing calcium changes in short-term toxicological studies. The relationship between the pH increase and the cell cleavage needs further investigation.