Abstract

A mutant which is capable of differentiating into spores and stalk cells without forming a cell aggregate was isolated from the cellular slime mould, Dictyostelium discoideum. The mutant stopped developing at various stages, before formation of mature fruits, and the cells differentiated into spores and stalk cells at whichever stage the development stopped. Unaggregated cells also differentiated into spores or stalk cells, depending on the culture conditions; differentiation into spores predominated in nutrient rich medium, while differentiation into stalk cells predominated in nutrient poor medium. The ratio of spores to stalk cells or of prespores to total cells in cell masses depended on the terminal structures formed; the ratio was unusually high or unusually low in a structure which stopped developing before papilla formation, while the ratio was normal in a structure formed after that stage. When isolated from a cell mass, prespore cells of the mutant did not dedifferentiate or resumed vegetative growth, indicating that they had lost plasticity of differentiation. The conditioned medium in which the mutant cells had grown was effective in inducing differentiation of wild type slug cells into spore-like or stalk-like cells.

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