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1.
We have used [3H]DNA labelling and autoradiography to investigate the localisation of cells in S phase of the cell cycle during the aggregation and slug stages of Dictyostelium discoideum development. Our results indicate that S phase cells occur behind a sharp transverse boundary, which falls just below (or behind) the anterior tip of the aggregate or slug. PAS staining indicates that this is the boundary between the prestalk and prespore regions.  相似文献   

2.
Changes in fine structures during the development of the cellular slime molds D. discoideum and D. mucoroides were studied, with emphasis on the regional differentiation between the prestalk and prespore cells of the slug. Cells in the prestalk region were in closer contact than those in the prespore region. Some differences were also noticed in the structure of plasma membrane between the two types of cells. An endoplasmic reticulum, vesicle, autophagic vacuole, and cytoplasmic fibril were found more abundantly in the prestalk cell than in the prespore cell. In the prespore cells there were observed a number of prespore specific vacuoles of ca. 0.6 μ diameter which consist of membraneous and fibrous structures. The vacuole was never found in the prestalk cells, and was a sole structure that existed only in one of the two types of cells. A possible function of such a vacuole was discussed in relation to spore differentiation. No differences in structure and distribution of mitochondria and crystal bodies were noticed between the prestalk and prespore cells, although these structures underwent considerable changes during the development. The nucleolus underwent considerable structual differentiation between the prestalk and prespore cells as well as during the course of development.  相似文献   

3.
We describe a method of separating prestalk and prespore cells of Dictyostelium discoideum slugs using a self-generating Percoll gradient. This method gives quantitative recovery of cells and good purity. Separated prestalk and prespore cells possess different levels of the enzymes UDP galactose :polysaccharide transferase, cAMP phosphodiesterase and glycogen phosphorylase. We have used this method, as well as mechanical dissection of slugs, to examine the fate of separated prestalk and prespore cells in Dictyostelium strains that are able to give rise to mature stalk and spore cells in cell monolayers. The results from such experiments provide direct evidence that prestalk and prespore cells from the migrating slug stage are programmed to differentiate into stalk and spore cells respectively.  相似文献   

4.
Polyketides induce prestalk cell differentiation in Dictyostelium. In the double-knockout mutant of the SteelyA and B polyketide synthases, most of the pstA cells—the major part of the prestalk cells—are lost, and we show by whole mount in situ hybridization that expression of prestalk genes is also reduced. Treatment of the double-knockout mutant with the PKS inhibitor cerulenin gave a further reduction, but some pstA cells still remained in the tip region, suggesting the existence of a polyketide-independent subtype of pstA cells. The double-knockout mutant and cerulenin-treated parental Ax2 cells form fruiting bodies with fragile, single-cell layered stalks after cerulenin treatment. Our results indicate that most pstA cells are induced by polyketides, but the pstA cells at the very tip of the slug are induced in some other way. In addition, a fruiting body with a single-cell layered, vacuolated stalk can form without polyketides.  相似文献   

5.
《Cellular signalling》2014,26(2):409-418
Cyclic AMP (cAMP) is an important intracellular signaling molecule for many G protein-mediated signaling pathways but the specificity of cAMP signaling in cells with multiple signaling pathways is not well-understood. In Dictyostelium, at least two different G protein signaling pathways, mediated by the Gα2 and Gα4 subunits, are involved with cAMP accumulation, spore production, and chemotaxis and the stimulation of these pathways results in the activation of ERK2, a mitogen-activated protein kinase that can down regulate the cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase RegA. The regA gene was disrupted in gα2 and gα4 cells to determine if the absence of this phosphodiesterase rescues the development of these G protein mutants as it does for erk2 mutants. The regA mutation had no major effects on developmental morphology but enriched the distribution of the Gα mutant cells to the prespore/prestalk border in chimeric aggregates. The loss of RegA function had no effect on Gα4-mediated folate chemotaxis. However, the regA gene disruption in gα4 cells, but not in gα2 cells, resulted in a substantial rescue and acceleration of spore production. This rescue in sporulation required cell autonomous signaling because the precocious sporulation could not be induced through intercellular signaling in chimeric aggregates. However, intercellular signals from regA strains increased the expression of the prestalk gene ecmB and accelerated the vacuolization of stalk cells. Intercellular signaling from the gα4regA strain did not induce ecmA gene expression indicating cell-type specificity in the promotion of prestalk cell development. regA gene disruption in a Gα4HC (Gα4 overexpression) strain did not result in precocious sporulation or stalk cell development indicating that elevated Gα4 subunit expression can mask regA associated phenotypes even when provided with wild-type intercellular signaling. These findings indicate that the Gα2 and Gα4-mediated pathways provide different contributions to the development of spores and stalk cells and that the absence of RegA function can bypass some but not all defects in G protein regulated spore development.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Scanning electron microscopic observations ofDictyostelium discoideum cell masses during slug formation revealed two populations around the anterior tip; one group of cells resembled elongated aggregation stream cells and their orientation suggested that they move to the tip, whereas the other group of cells were isodiametric and showed no obvious orientation. In seeking further evidence for a role of differential cAMP chemotaxis in the orientation and movement of slug cells the anterior prestalk cells were compared to the posterior prespore cells in two chemotaxis tests. When a cell mass is placed on cAMP agar the prestalk cells exhibited better movement to cAMP sources but when the gradient was generated in a diffusion chamber the prestalk cells did not. This evidence suggested that the cells which are better able to generate a cAMP gradient might form part of the anterior zone of the slug.  相似文献   

7.
We have examined the distribution of Dictyostelium lectins (discoidin I and II) during development by means of a sample preparation method of a whole mount. Monoclonal antibodies which were bound to discoidins revealed unique patterns of discoidin distribution. Discoidin I was localized mainly at the periphery of the aggregates, while the base of the aggregates was devoid of discoidin I staining. Discoidin I was not prominent in the body of the aggregates but when a migrating slug culminated, discoidin I staining appeared in the prestalk region, this suggested that prestalk cells begin to express discoidin I at the onset of culmination. During fruit formation we observed discoidin I staining at the foremost anterior prestalk region of the culminant, which implies a heterogeneity of discoidin I expression among prestalk cells; such a heterogenous pattern has also been found in other prestalk-specific proteins. In addition, anterior-like cells (ALC), which were sorted at the apex and basal parts of a spore mass during culmination, were also strongly stained with anti-discoidin I mAb; interestingly, we observed the staining of ALC from the slug stage through fruit formation. No discoidin II was observed in a migrating slug that had already accumulated prespore antigen ligands for discoidin II; it appeared in prespore cells after the onset of culmination. The present results indicate that, in addition to the early expression of discoidin I, both discoidin I and II are expressed during culmination, and these lectins also seem to be involved in the late development of Dictyostelium .  相似文献   

8.
 Shortly after initiation of Dictyostelium fruiting body formation, prespore cells begin to differentiate into non-motile spores. Although these cells lose their ability to move, they are, nevertheless, elevated to the tip of the stalk. Removal of the amoeboid anterior-like cells, located above the differentiating spores in the developing fruiting body, prevents further spore elevation although the stalk continues to elongate. Furthermore, replacement of the anterior-like cells with anterior-like cells from another fruiting body largely restores the ability to lift the spores to the top of the stalk. However, if amoeboid prestalk cells are used to replace the anterior-like cells, there is no restoration of spore elevation. Finally, when a droplet of mineral oil replaces differentiating spores, it is treated as are the spores: the mineral oil is elevated in the presence of anterior-like cells and becomes arrested on the stalk in the absence of anterior-like cells. Because a similar droplet of mineral oil is totally ignored by slug tissue, it appears that there is a dramatic transformation in the treatment of non-motile matter at this point in Dictyostelium development. Received: 26 January 1998 / Accepted: 27 May 1998  相似文献   

9.
10.
Prespore cell‐inducing (psi, ψ) factor (PsiA), encoded by the psiA gene of Dictyostelium, is a secreted signal glycoprotein that induces prespore cell differentiation when added to monolayer cultures. In situ hybridization during normal development showed that the psiA gene is highly expressed in scattered cells at the mound stage and in prespore cells at the onset of culmination. The conventional prespore‐cell marker genes, cotC and pspA, were expressed normally in psiA? and psiA overexpressing strains. Expressions of rnrB and cudA are repressed in the prestalk cells of a wild type slug to render prespore specific pattern. However, a promoter‐reporter fusion gene, rnrB:lacZ, showed an ectopic expression in the prestalk cells of the psiA? strain while cudA(psp):lacZ did so in those of the psiA overexpressing strain. Overexpression of psiA delayed expression of the prestalk specific gene, ecmB, during development, while knocking out psiA promoted its expression. In addition, overexpression inhibited DIF‐1‐induced stalk formation in monolayer cultures. Together with the known prespore inducing activity, the results indicate that PsiA regulates both prespore and prestalk/stalk cell differentiation. These results indicate that PsiA is also involved in prestalk cell differentiation.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The prestalk region of the Dictyostelium slug has recently been shown by Williams and his collaborators to consist of two distinct cell types, pstA and pstB cells. Here the movement of these cells in both the slug and culmination stages has been examined with the use of vital dyes. In the slug some of the pstB cells are continually lost from the prestalk region as small clusters of cells. These cells move through the prespore region and temporarily lie in the rearguard region at the posterior end of the slug. They are finally left in the slug's slime track as single cells or groups of a few cells. When culmination is initiated the pstB cells move as a whole from the prestalk region to the base where they join the rearguard cells to form the basal disc of the fruiting body. Transplantation experiments reveal that the rearguard cells form an outer ring portion of the basal disc and the pstB cells form an inner portion to which the stalk attaches. The continuous loss of one cell type during the slug stage without any change in cell type proportions suggests that cell types are redifferentiating. Grafting and transplantation experiments reveal that there is a unidirectional flow of cells through successive steps of cell type conversion. Prespore cells redifferentiate as anterior-like cells which migrate to the prestalk region and become pstA cells. The pstA cells then replace the pstB cells that are lost from the slug.  相似文献   

12.
Free-living amoebae of the cellular slime mouldDictyostelium discoideum aggregate when starved and give rise to a long and thin multicellular structure, the slug. The slug resembles a metazoan embryo, and as with other embryos it is possible to specify a fate map. In the case ofDictyostelium discoideum the map is especially simple: cells in the anterior fifth of the slug die and form a stalk while the majority of those in the posterior differentiate into spores. The genesis of this anterior-posterior distinction is the subject of our review. In particular, we ask: what are the relative roles of individual pre-aggregative predispositions and post-aggregative position in determining cell fate? We review the literature on the subject and conclude that both factors are important. Variations in nutritional status, or in cell cycle phase at starvation, can bias the probability that an amoeba differentiates into a stalk cell or a spore. On the other hand, isolates, or slug fragments, consisting of only prestalk cells or only prespore cells can regulate so as to result in a normal range of both cell types. We identify three levels of control, each being responsible for guiding patterning in normal development: (i) ‘coin tossing’, whereby a cell autonomously exhibits a preference for developing along either the stalk or the spore pathway with relative probabilities that can be influenced by the environment; (ii) ‘chemical kinetics’, whereby prestalk and prespore cells originate from undifferentiated amoebae on a probabilistic basis but, having originated, interact (e.g. via positive and negative feedbacks), and the interaction influences the possibility of conversion of one cell type into the other; and (iii) ‘positional information’, in which the spatial distribution of morphogens in the slug influences the pathway of differentiation. In the case of possibilities (i) and (ii), sorting out of like cell types leads to the final spatial pattern. In the case of possibility (iii), the pattern arisesin situ  相似文献   

13.
FbxA is a novel member of a family of proteins that contain an F-box and WD40 repeats and that target specific proteins for degradation via proteasomes. In fruiting bodies formed from cells where the fbxA gene is disrupted (fbxA(-) cells), the spore mass fails to fully ascend the stalk. In addition, fbxA(-) slugs continue to migrate under environmental conditions where the parental strain immediately forms fruiting bodies. Consistent with this latter behaviour, the development of fbxA(-) cells is hypersensitive to ammonia, the signaling molecule that regulates the transition from the slug stage to terminal differentiation. The slug comprises an anterior prestalk region and a posterior prespore region and the fbxA mRNA is highly enriched in the prestalk cells. The prestalk zone of the slug is further subdivided into an anterior pstA region and a posterior pstO region. In fbxA(-) slugs the pstO region is reduced in size and the prespore region is proportionately expanded. Our results indicate that FbxA is part of a regulatory pathway that controls cell fate decisions and spatial patterning via regulated protein degradation.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The sorting behavior of mixtures ofD. discoideum cells which had been developed for different lengths of time was examined. Cells developed for 4 and 8 h were mixed together and allowed to form slugs. Within the slugs, 8 h cells sorted to the anterior prestalk region while 4 h cells sorted to the posterior prespore region. These results indicate that the more developed a cell is, the more likely it is to become part of the prestalk zone in the slug. They are also consistent with the differential adhesion and chemotaxis hypotheses as a mechanism for cell sorting since cells become more adhesive and chemotactically responsive as development proceeds.  相似文献   

15.
The prestalk and prespore cells from the Dictyostelium discoideummulticellular slug stage of development differ in assembly ofglycoconjugates. Prespore cells are 2- to 3-fold more activethan prestalk cells in the assembly of N-linked glycans and20-fold more active in their fucosylation. Only prespore cellssynthesize an O-linked glycan consisting in part of Fuc -linkedto N-acetylglucosamine. Incorporation of fucose, glucosamine,mannose and galactose into large pronase-resistant glycoconjugateswas almost exclusively into prespore cells. Such glucosamine-labelledglycoconjugates resist fragmentation by ß-eliminationand include a glycoantigen dependent on the modB genetic locus.In contrast, large fucose-labelled glycoconjugates consistedof multiple, small, O-linked oligosaccharides on carrier peptides.The spore coat protein SP96 has several fucosylated O-linkedoligosaccharides, one of which correlates with a fucose epitopepreviously shown to localize in prespore vesicles and the outerlayer of the spore coat. Dictyostelium discoideum glycoconjugates glycoproteins prespore prestalk  相似文献   

16.
17.
The ecmA (pDd63) and ecmB (pDd56) genes encode extracellular matrix proteins of the slime sheath and stalk tube of Dictyostelium discoideum. Using fusion genes containing the promoter of one or other gene coupled to an immunologically detectable reporter, we previously identified two classes of prestalk cells in the tip of the migrating slug; a central core of pstB cells, which express the ecmB gene, surrounded by pstA cells, which express the ecmA gene. PstB cells lie at the position where stalk tube formation is initiated at culmination and we show that they act as its founders. As culmination proceeds, pstA cells transform into pstB cells by activating the ecmB gene as they enter the stalk tube. The prespore region of the slug contains a population of cells, termed anterior-like cells (ALC), which have the characteristics of prestalk cells. We show that the ecmA and ecmB genes are expressed at a low level in ALC during slug migration and that their expression in these cells is greatly elevated during culmination. Previous observations have shown that ALC sort to surround the prespore cells during culmination (Sternfeld and David, 1982 Devl Biol. 93, 111-118) and we find just such a distribution for pstB cells. We believe that the ecmB protein plays a structural role in the stalk tube and its presence, as a cradle around the spore head, suggests that it may play a further function, perhaps in ensuring integrity of the spore mass during elevation. If this interpretation is correct, then a primary role of anterior-like cells may be to form these structures at culmination. We previously identified a third class of prestalk cells, pstO cells, which lie behind pstA cells in the slug anterior and which appeared to express neither the ecmA nor the ecmB gene. Using B-galactosidase fusion constructs, which give more sensitive detection of gene expression, we now find that these cells express the ecmA gene but at a much lower level than pstA cells. We also show that expression of the ecmA gene becomes uniformly high throughout the prestalk zone when slugs are allowed to migrate in the light. Overhead light favours culmination and it may be that increased expression of the ecmA gene in the pst 'O' region is a preparatory step in the process.  相似文献   

18.
The processes of differentiation of the presumptive cells (prespore and prestalk cens) into mature spores, stalk and basal-disc cells in Dictyotelium discoideum was investigated. The number of stalk and disc cells in pre-labeled culminating cell masses was estimated by determining the radioactivity of the undissociable fraction separated by filtration from the dissociable fraction containing presumptive cells and spores. Changes in the proportion of amoeboid cells stainable with fluorescein-conjugated antispore serum and encapsulated spores were also followed in the dissociable fraction. Formation of stalk and disc cells began at 17 hr of development and was completed at 26 hr, while formation of morphologically identifiable spores began at 18 hr and was completed at 20 hr, long before completion of stalk formation. At the onset of culmination, unstained cells abruptly increased with an accompanying decrease of stained cells, when unstained rear-guard cells appeared in the hind region. Although some of the rear-guard cells soon differentiated into basal-disc cells, the rest remained amoeboid in the upper part of the spore mass (sorus) after complete formation of a fruiting body. Despite the presence of the amoeboid cells in mature sori, the proportion of the sorus to the stalk and disc of a fruiting body was approximately equal to that of stained (prespore) to unstained (prestalk) cells in a migrating slug.  相似文献   

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