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The effects of cell density and starvation on early developmental events in Dictyostelium discoideum
Authors:J P Margolskee  S Froshauer  R Skrinska  H F Lodish
Affiliation:Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 USA
Abstract:We show that removal of yeast extract and trypticase from growth medium is sufficient for induction of several key events which occur during the early stages of Dictyostelium differentiation: run-off of polysomes, the earliest known change in macromolecular metabolism; appearance of the cell surface cAMP receptor; and aggregation itself. Starvation of glucose has little effect on these parameters. These results are consistent with those of other investigators who showed that starvation only of amino acids will induce other activities associated with cAMP-mediated cell signaling and cell-cell adhesion. We show, in contrast, that other factors are involved in the increase in the relative rates of synthesis of three polypeptides very early in differentiation: actin, and two proteins (“45-min” proteins) which are synthesized only during the period of 45–90 min. The induction of synthesis of these three proteins and presumably, of their mRNAs, is not the result of starvation for glucose or amino acids but is the result of plating cells at high density. The increases in the synthesis of these proteins are dependent on the density at which cells are plated and do not occur at a density 75-fold lower than the density used in standard experiments. Cells growing at high density or near stationary phase do not show the induction of increased synthesis of actin or the “45-min” proteins. These experiments suggest that these early developmental changes may be dependent on a threshold level of a diffusible factor excreted early in development.
Keywords:To whom requests for reprints should be sent.
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