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A Highlights from MBoC Selection: Forty-five years of cGMP research in Dictyostelium: understanding the regulation and function of the cGMP pathway for cell movement and chemotaxis
Authors:Peter J M van Haastert  Ineke Keizer-Gunnink  Henderikus Pots  Claudia Ortiz-Mateos  Douwe Veltman  Wouter van Egmond  Arjan Kortholt
Institution:University of British Columbia;aDepartment of Cell Biochemistry, University of Groningen, 9747 AG Groningen, the Netherlands
Abstract:In Dictyostelium, chemoattractants induce a fast cGMP response that mediates myosin filament formation in the rear of the cell. The major cGMP signaling pathway consists of a soluble guanylyl cyclase sGC, a cGMP-stimulated cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase, and the cGMP-target protein GbpC. Here we combine published experiments with many unpublished experiments performed in the past 45 years on the regulation and function of the cGMP signaling pathway. The chemoattractants stimulate heterotrimeric Gαβγ and monomeric Ras proteins. A fraction of the soluble guanylyl cyclase sGC binds with high affinity to a limited number of membrane binding sites, which is essential for sGC to become activated by Ras and Gα proteins. sGC can also bind to F-actin; binding to branched F-actin in pseudopods enhances basal sGC activity, whereas binding to parallel F-actin in the cortex reduces sGC activity. The cGMP pathway mediates cell polarity by inhibiting the rear: in unstimulated cells by sGC activity in the branched F-actin of pseudopods, in a shallow gradient by stimulated cGMP formation in pseudopods at the leading edge, and during cAMP oscillation to erase the previous polarity and establish a new polarity axis that aligns with the direction of the passing cAMP wave.
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