Abstract

At least three distinct types of cell arise from a population of similar amoebae during Dictyostelium development: prespore, prestalk A and prestalk B cells. We report evidence suggesting that this cellular diversification can be brought about by the combinatorial action of two diffusible signals, cAMP and DIF-1. Cells at different stages of normal development were transferred to shaken suspension, challenged with various combinations of signal molecules and the expression of cell-type-specific mRNA markers measured 1-2 h later. pDd63, pDd56 and D19 mRNAs were used for prestalk A, prestalk B and prespore cells respectively. We find the following results. (1) Cells first become responsive to DIF-1 for prestalk A differentiation and to cAMP for prespore differentiation at the end of aggregation, about 2 h before these cell types normally appear. (2) At the first finger stage of development, when the rate of accumulation of the markers is maximal, the expression of each is favoured by a unique combination of effectors: prespore differentiation is stimulated by cAMP and inhibited by DIF-1; prestalk A differentiation is stimulated by both cAMP and DIF-1 and prestalk B differentiation is stimulated by DIF-1 and inhibited by cAMP. (3) Half-maximal effects are produced by 10-70 nM DIF-1, which is in the physiological range. (4) Ammonia and adenosine, which can affect cell differentiation in other circumstances, have no significant pathway-specific effect in our conditions. These results suggest that cell differentiation could be brought about in normal development by the localized action of cAMP and DIF-1.

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