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1.
The organisation and form of most organisms is generated during theirembryonic development and involves precise spatial and temporal controlof cell division, cell death, cell differentiation and cell movement.Differential cell movement is a particularly important mechanism in thegeneration of form. Arguably the best understood mechanism of directedmovement is chemotaxis. Chemotaxis plays a major role in the starvationinduced multicellular development of the social amoebae Dictyostelium.Upon starvation up to 105 individual amoebae aggregate to form afruiting body. In this paper we review the evidence that the movement ofthe cells during all stages of Dictyostelium development is controlled bypropagating waves of cAMP which control the chemotactic movement ofthe cells. We analyse the complex interactions between cell-cell signallingresulting in cAMP waves of various geometries and cell movement whichresults in a redistribution of the signalling sources and therefore changes thegeometry of the waves. We proceed to show how the morphogenesis,including aggregation stream and mound formation, slug formation andmigration, of this relatively simple organism is beginning to be understoodat the level of rules for cell behaviour, which can be tested experimentallyand theoretically by model calculations.  相似文献   

2.
Migration and behaviour of Dictyostelium slugs results from coordinated movement of its constituent cells. It has been proposed that cell movement is controlled by propagating waves of cAMP as during aggregation and in the mound. We report the existence of optical density waves in slugs; they are initiated in the tip and propagate backwards. The waves reflect periodic cell movement and are mediated by cAMP, as injection of cAMP or cAMP phosphodiesterase disrupts wave propagation and results in effects on cell movement and, therefore, slug migration. Inhibiting the function of the cAMP receptor cAR1 blocks wave propagation, showing that the signal is mediated by cAR1. Wave initiation is strictly dependent on the tip; in decapitated slugs no new waves are initiated and slug movement stops until a new tip regenerates. Isolated tips continue to migrate while producing waves. We conclude from these observations that the tip acts as a pacemaker for cAMP waves that coordinate cell movement in slugs.  相似文献   

3.
Dictyostelium development starts with the chemotactic aggregation of up to 10(6) amoebae in response to propagating cAMP waves. cAMP is produced by the aggregation stage adenylyl cyclase (ACA) and cells lacking ACA (aca null) cannot aggregate. Temperature-sensitive mutants of ACA were selected from a population of aca null cells transformed with a library of ACA genes, a major segment of which had been amplified by error-prone PCR. One mutant (tsaca2) that can complement the aggregation null phenotype of aca null cells at 22 degrees C but not at 28 degrees C was characterized in detail. The basal catalytic activity of the enzyme in this mutant was rapidly and reversibly inactivated at 28 degrees C. Using this mutant strain we show that cell movement in aggregates and mounds is organized by propagating waves of cAMP. Synergy experiments between wild-type and tsaca2 cells, shifted to the restrictive temperature at various stages of development, showed that ACA plays an important role in the control of cell sorting and tip formation.  相似文献   

4.
Many developmental processes involve chemotactic cell movement up or down dynamic chemical gradients. Studies of the molecular mechanisms of chemotactic movement of Dictyostelium amoebae up cAMP gradients highlight the importance of PIP3 signaling in the control of cAMP-dependent actin polymerization, which drives the protrusion of lamellipodia and filopodia at the leading edge of the cell, but also emphasize the need for myosin thick filament assembly and motor activation for the contraction of the back of the cell. These process become even more important during the multicellular stages of development, when propagating waves of cAMP coordinate the chemotactic movement of tens of thousands of cells, resulting in multicellular morphogenesis. Recent experiments show that chemotaxis, especially in response to members of the FGF, PDGF and VEGF families of growth factors, plays a key role in the guidance of mesoderm cells during gastrulation in chick, mouse and frog embryos. The molecular mechanisms of signal detection and signaling to the actin-myosin cytoskeleton remain to be elucidated.  相似文献   

5.
We have previously reported the detection of cAMP waves within monolayers of aggregating Dictyostelium discoideum cells (K. J. Tomchik and P.N. Devreotes, 1981, Science 212, 443-446). The computer-assisted analysis presented here of the fluorographic images of the cAMP waves reveals (1) all the waves have a consistent width and height; (2) cAMP concentrations within centers of concentric aggregation territories oscillate periodically while at spiral centers the concentration builds up to a plateau value within 2 mm; (3) cells within the region of intersection of two oppositely directed cAMP waves are stimulated to produce more cAMP than those responding to a single wave; (4) cells start to move when the cAMP level begins to increase and cease movement when the peak cAMP concentration reaches the cell.  相似文献   

6.
Differential cell movement is an important mechanism in the development and morphogenesis of many organisms. In many cases there are indications that chemotaxis is a key mechanism controlling differential cell movement. This can be particularly well studied in the starvation-induced multicellular development of the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. Upon starvation, up to 10(5) individual amoebae aggregate to form a fruiting body The cells aggregate by chemotaxis in response to propagating waves of cAMP, initiated by an aggregation centre. During their chemotactic aggregation the cells start to differentiate into prestalk and prespore cells, precursors to the stalk and spores that form the fruiting body. These cells enter the aggregate in a random order but then sort out to form a simple axial pattern in the slug. Our experiments strongly suggest that the multicellular aggregates (mounds) and slugs are also organized by propagating cAMP waves and, furthermore, that cell-type-specific differences in signalling and chemotaxis result in cell sorting, slug formation and movement.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Starving amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum communicate by relaying extracellular cAMP signals, which direct chemotactic movement, resulting in the aggregation of thousands of cells into multicellular aggregates. Both cAMP relay and chemotaxis require the activation of PI3 kinase signaling. The spatiotemporal dynamics of PI3 kinase signaling can be followed in individual cells via the cAMP-induced membrane recruitment of a GFP-tagged PH domain-containing protein, CRAC, which is required for the activation of adenylylcyclase.RESULTS: We show that polarized periodic CRAC-GFP translocation occurs during the aggregation and mound stages of development in response to periodic cAMP signals. The duration of CRAC translocation to the membrane is determined by the duration of the rising phase of the cAMP signal. The system shows rapid adaptation and responds to the rate of change of the extracellular cAMP concentration. When the cells are in close contact, it takes 10 s for the signal to propagate from one cell to the next. In slugs, all cells show a permanent polarized PI3 kinase signaling in their leading edge, which is dependent on cell-cell contact.CONCLUSIONS: Measuring the redistribution of GFP-tagged CRAC has enabled us to study the dynamics of PI3 kinase-mediated cell-cell communication at the individual cell level in the multicellular stages of Dictyostelium development. This approach should also be useful to study the interactions between cell-cell signaling, cell polarization, and movement in the development of other organisms.  相似文献   

8.
Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S-1-P) is a bioactive lipid that plays a role in diverse biological processes. It functions both as an extracellular ligand through a family of high-affinity G-protein-coupled receptors, and intracellularly as a second messenger. A growing body of evidence has implicated S-1-P in controlling cell movement and chemotaxis in cultured mammalian cells. Mutant D. discoideum cells, in which the gene encoding the S-1-P lyase had been specifically disrupted by homologous recombination, previously were shown to be defective in pseudopod formation, suggesting that a resulting defect might exist in motility and/or chemotaxis. To test this prediction, we analyzed the behavior of mutant cells in buffer, and in both spatial and temporal gradients of the chemoattractant cAMP, using computer-assisted 2-D and 3-D motion analysis systems. Under all conditions, S-1-P lyase null mutants were unable to suppress lateral pseudopod formation like wild-type control cells. This resulted in a reduction in velocity in buffer and spatial gradients of cAMP. Mutant cells exhibited positive chemotaxis in spatial gradients of cAMP, but did so with lowered efficiency, again because of their inability to suppress lateral pseudopod formation. Mutant cells responded normally to simulated temporal waves of cAMP but mimicked the temporal dynamics of natural chemotactic waves. The effect must be intracellular since no homologs of the S-1-P receptors have been identified in the Dictyostelium genome. The defects in the S-1-P lyase null mutants were similar to those seen in mutants lacking the genes for myosin IA, myosin IB, and clathrin, indicating that S-1-P signaling may play a role in modulating the activity or organization of these cytoskeletal elements in the regulation of lateral pseudopod formation.  相似文献   

9.
Cell polarity and Dictyostelium development   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Cell polarity is essential for unicellular and multicellular stages of Dictyostelium development. Chemotaxis during early development requires each cell to rapidly reorganize its cytoskeleton to point towards a source of cAMP. This involves a balance between local induction of F-actin polymerization and suppression of pseudopods that point in other directions. Both the lipid phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5) trisphosphate and the soluble signal cGMP have been implicated in these processes, in addition to conserved and novel proteins. During later development cells adopt newly discovered, alternative modes of movement and interact through adhesion molecules. Finally, cells polarize secretion to particular regions of their surface.  相似文献   

10.
Regulation and function of G alpha protein subunits in Dictyostelium   总被引:28,自引:0,他引:28  
We have examined the developmental regulation and function of two G alpha protein subunits, G alpha 1 and G alpha 2, from Dictyostelium. G alpha 1 is expressed in vegetative cells through aggregate stages while G alpha 2 is inducible by cAMP pulses and preferentially expressed in aggregation. Our results suggest that G alpha 2 encodes the G alpha protein subunit associated with the cAMP receptor and mediates all known receptor-activated intracellular signal transduction processes, including chemotaxis and gene regulation. G alpha 1 appears to function in both the cell cycle and development. Overexpression of G alpha 1 results in large, multinucleated cells that develop abnormally. The central role that these G alpha proteins play in signal transduction processes and in controlling Dictyostelium development is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The Dictyostelid social amoebas represent one of nature's several inventions of multicellularity. Though normally feeding as single cells, nutrient stress triggers the collection of amoebas into colonies that form delicately shaped fruiting structures in which the cells differentiate into spores and up to three cell types to support the spore mass. Cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) plays a very dominant role in controlling morphogenesis and cell differentiation in the model species Dictyostelium discoideum. As a secreted chemoattractant cAMP coordinates cell movement during aggregation and fruiting body morphogenesis. Secreted cAMP also controls gene expression at different developmental stages, while intracellular cAMP is extensively used to transduce the effect of other stimuli that control the developmental program. In this review, I present an overview of the different roles of cAMP in the model D. discoideum and I summarize studies aimed to resolve how these roles emerged during Dictyostelid evolution.  相似文献   

12.
Dictyostelium discoideum (Dd) is a widely studied model system from which fundamental insights into cell movement, chemotaxis, aggregation and pattern formation can be gained. In this system aggregation results from the chemotactic response by dispersed amoebae to a travelling wave of the chemoattractant cAMP. We have developed a model in which the cells are treated as discrete points in a continuum field of the chemoattractant, and transduction of the extracellular cAMP signal into the intracellular signal is based on the G protein model developed by Tang & Othmer. The model reproduces a number of experimental observations and gives further insight into the aggregation process. We investigate different rules for cell movement the factors that influence stream formation the effect on aggregation of noise in the choice of the direction of movement and when spiral waves of chemoattractant and cell density are likely to occur. Our results give new insight into the origin of spiral waves and suggest that streaming is due to a finite amplitude instability.  相似文献   

13.
A neural model is described of how spontaneous retinal waves are formed in infant mammals, and how these waves organize activity-dependent development of a topographic map in the lateral geniculate nucleus, with connections from each eye segregated into separate anatomical layers. The model simulates the spontaneous behavior of starburst amacrine cells and retinal ganglion cells during the production of retinal waves during the first few weeks of mammalian postnatal development. It proposes how excitatory and inhibitory mechanisms within individual cells, such as Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels, and cAMP currents and signaling cascades, can modulate the spatiotemporal dynamics of waves, notably by controlling the after-hyperpolarization currents of starburst amacrine cells. Given the critical role of the geniculate map in the development of visual cortex, these results provide a foundation for analyzing the temporal dynamics whereby the visual cortex itself develops.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Cyclic AMP (cAMP) functions as the extracellular chemoattractant in the aggregation phase of Dictyostelium development. There is some question, however, concerning what role, if any, it plays intracellularly in motility and chemotaxis. To test for such a role, the behavior of null mutants of acaA, the adenylyl cyclase gene that encodes the enzyme responsible for cAMP synthesis during aggregation, was analyzed in buffer and in response to experimentally generated spatial and temporal gradients of extracellular cAMP. acaA- cells were defective in suppressing lateral pseudopods in response to a spatial gradient of cAMP and to an increasing temporal gradient of cAMP. acaA- cells were incapable of chemotaxis in natural waves of cAMP generated by majority control cells in mixed cultures. These results indicate that intracellular cAMP and, hence, adenylyl cyclase play an intracellular role in the chemotactic response. The behavioral defects of acaA- cells were surprisingly similar to those of cells of null mutants of regA, which encodes the intracellular phosphodiesterase that hydrolyzes cAMP and, hence, functions opposite adenylyl cyclase A (ACA). This result is consistent with the hypothesis that ACA and RegA are components of a receptor-regulated intracellular circuit that controls protein kinase A activity. In this model, the suppression of lateral pseudopods in the front of a natural wave depends on a complete circuit. Hence, deletion of any component of the circuit (i.e., RegA or ACA) would result in the same chemotactic defect.  相似文献   

16.
Under conditions of starvation, populations of the amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum aggregate are mediated by chemical excitation waves of cAMP. Two types of waves can be observed, either spiral or circular-shaped ones. We investigate transitions from rotating spirals to circular shaped waves (target patterns). Two different experiments demonstrating this phenomenon are presented. In the first case a continuous transition from the spiral type pattern to target waves was observed at the later stages of aggregation. In the second case the transition was induced by annihilation of waves by a spatially homogeneous cAMP pulse. Instead of the originally present spiral waves, oscillating spots bearing target patterns emerged. On the basis of a model for Dictyostelium aggregation, we provide a theoretical explanation for such transitions. It is shown that cell density can be an effective bifurcation parameter. Under certain conditions, the system is shifted from the excitable to the oscillatory state while the frequency of oscillations is proportional to the square root of the cell density. Thus, the regions with the highest cell density during the early stages of the spatial rearrangement of the cells become pacemakers and produce target patterns. The analytic results were confirmed in numerical simulations of the model.  相似文献   

17.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(3):1137-1148
Both cellular motility and intracellular particle movement are compared between normal Dictyostelium amebae of strain AX4 and amebae of a myosin II heavy chain null mutant, HS2215, using the computer assisted "Dynamic Morphology System." In AX4 cells rapidly translocating in buffer, cytoplasmic expansion is apical and the majority of intracellular particles move anteriorly, towards the site of expansion. When these cells are pulsed with 10(-6) M cAMP, the peak concentration of the natural cAMP wave, cells stop translocating and average particle velocity decreases threefold within 2-4 s after cAMP addition. After 8 s, there is a partial rebound both in cytoplasmic expansion and particle velocity, but in both cases, original apical polarity is lost. In HS2215 cells in buffer, both cellular translocation and average particle velocity are already at the depressed levels observed in normal cells immediately after cAMP addition, and no anterior bias is observed in either the direction of cytoplasmic expansion or the direction of particle movement. The addition of cAMP to myosin-minus cells results in no additional effect. The results demonstrate that myosin II is necessary for (a) the rapid rate of intracellular particle movement, (b) the biased anterior directionality of particle movement, and (c) the rapid inhibition of particle movement by cAMP.  相似文献   

18.
Dynamics of retinal waves are controlled by cyclic AMP   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Stellwagen D  Shatz CJ  Feller MB 《Neuron》1999,24(3):673-685
Waves of spontaneous activity sweep across the developing mammalian retina and influence the pattern of central connections made by ganglion cell axons. These waves are driven by synaptic input from amacrine cells. We show that cholinergic synaptic transmission during waves is not blocked by TTX, indicating that release from starburst amacrine cells is independent of sodium action potentials. The spatiotemporal properties of the waves are regulated by endogenous release of adenosine, which sets intracellular cAMP levels through activation of A2 receptors present on developing amacrine and ganglion cells. Increasing cAMP levels increase the size, speed, and frequency of the waves. Conversely, inhibiting adenylate cyclase or PKA prevents wave activity. Together, these results imply a novel mechanism in which levels of cAMP within an immature retinal circuit regulate the precise spatial and temporal patterns of spontaneous neural activity.  相似文献   

19.
Cilia are complex organelles involved in sensory perception and fluid or cell movement. They are constructed through a highly conserved process called intraflagellar transport (IFT). Mutations in IFT genes, such as Tg737, result in severe developmental defects and disease. In the case of the Tg737orpk mutants, these pathological alterations include cystic kidney disease, biliary and pancreatic duct abnormalities, skeletal patterning defects, and hydrocephalus. Here, we explore the connection between cilia dysfunction and the development of hydrocephalus by using the Tg737orpk mutants. Our analysis indicates that cilia on cells of the brain ventricles of Tg737orpk mutant mice are severely malformed. On the ependymal cells, these defects lead to disorganized beating and impaired cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) movement. However, the loss of the cilia beat and CSF flow is not the initiating factor, as the pathology is present prior to the development of motile cilia on these cells and CSF flow is not impaired at early stages of the disease. Rather, our results suggest that loss of cilia leads to altered function of the choroid plexus epithelium, as evidenced by elevated intracellular cAMP levels and increased chloride concentration in the CSF. These data suggest that cilia function is necessary for regulating ion transport and CSF production, as well as for CSF flow through the ventricles.  相似文献   

20.
Signaling systems sensitive to external stimuli of various nature have appeared at the earliest stages of evolution—at the level of lower eukaryotes. This review summarizes and analyzed for first time the literature data on signaling systems coupled to G-proteins the ameba Dictyostelium discoideum, one of the best studied representatives of unicellular animals. Through these systems, cAMP, chemoattractant, and polypeptide factors regulate such cellular processes as growth, movement, aggregation, differentiation, and sporulation. In Dictyostelium discoideum, heterotrimeric G-proteins were shown to play an important role in providing functional coupling between the plasma membrane receptors to enzymes-generators of second messengers, like this occurs in the higher eukaryote cells. The data are presented on comparative analysis of the primary protein structures, components of the signaling systems coupled to G-proteins in amebae and higher eukaryotes. These data indicate the high conservatism of these systems in evolution.  相似文献   

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