Temporal control of autoactivator synthesis and secretion during spontaneous spore germination in Dictyostelium discoideum |
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Authors: | David A. Cotter Martha L. Glaves |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences, University of Windsor, N9B 3P4 Windsor, Ontario, Canada |
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Abstract: | SG mutant and aged wild type spores of the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum germinate in the absence of an externally applied activation treatment. This type of germination is referred to as autoactivation. During the swelling stage of autoactivation, spores release a factor, the autoactivator, capable of stimulating germination in subsequent spore populations. The autoactivator was not present in the dormant spore, but it or a precursor was produced internally during the first hour of autoactivation. This production was sensitive to moderately high temperatures (+31° C) and was completely destroyed by heat activation (45° C for 30 min). Internal production of the autoactivator was not sensitive to protein synthesis inhibitors. However, the release of the activator from the spore appeared to be regulated by protein synthesis. Internal autoactivator was also produced in the aged wild type strain during the postautoactivation lag phase. The activator could not be directly isolated from within the germinating spore. Its activity on the rest of the spore population was dependent upon its release from the germinating spore. A model is presented integrating the effects of heat, cycloheximide, autoinhibitor and autoactivator on spores of D. discoideum. |
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Keywords: | Autoinhibitor Autoactivator Heat shock Protein synthesis Dictyostelium discoideum Spore Germination |
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