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Responses of the ciliates <Emphasis Type="Italic">Tetrahymena</Emphasis> and <Emphasis Type="Italic">Paramecium</Emphasis> to external ATP and GTP
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Todd?M?HennesseyEmail author
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, University at Buffalo, Amherst, New York, USA;(2) Department of Biological Science, University at Buffalo, H610 Hochstetter Hall, Amherst, NY 14260, USA
Abstract:The unicellular ciliates Paramecium and Tetrahymena are the simplest eukaryotic cells to show reliable depolarizing responses to micromolar concentrations of external ATP and GTP. Their simplicity allows for combined analysis of swimming behavior, electrophysiology, receptor binding, behavioral mutant and drug screens as well as molecular genetic approaches such as RNAi and gene knockouts experiments. ATP and GTP are depolarizing chemorepellents in both ciliates, producing measurable receptor potentials and Ca2+-based action potentials that are correlated with jerking behaviors called avoiding reactions (AR). GTP also causes repetitive continuous ciliary reversals (CCR) and oscillating plateau depolarizations in Paramecium. Both ciliates show high affinity, saturable external binding of 32P-GTP and 32P-ATP but GTP does not compete for ATP binding and vice versa. Chemosensory adaptation occurs after continued exposure (15 min) to these ligands, producing a loss of external binding and forward swimming. However, cells adapted to ATP still bind and respond to GTP and GTP-adapted cells still bind and respond to ATP. This, combined with pharmacological analyses, suggests that there are two separate receptor systems: A metabotropic ATP receptor pathway and a different, novel GTP receptor pathway. A Paramecium mutant (ginA) lacks the GTP-induced oscillating depolarizations but does show AR in GTP, unveiling isolated GTP-receptor potentials for study. An ecto-ATPase is also present that may be involved in inactivation of ATP and GTP signals. Gene knockout experiments are currently underway to determine the roles of the ecto-ATPase and a putative 7-transmembrane spanning receptor in these responses.
Keywords:adaptation  ATP  binding  ecto-ATPase  electrophysiology  GTP  mutants  Paramecium  Tetrahymena
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