Abstract
Adaptation may be the result of a change in affinity and/or number of cAMP-binding sites at the cell surface. To test this possibility we used agip 53, a mutant that does not synthesize cAMP in response to cAMP stimulation. cAMP induced a fast decrease in cAMP-binding to aggregation-competent cells, which reached a maximum at 10–20 s and was reversible with at0.5 of about 70 s. The decrease in cAMP-binding involved 46000 sites per cell and was mainly due to a reduction in the apparent affinity for cAMP-binding and to a smaller extent to slowly dissociating cAMP. Our results suggest that under these conditions only a fraction of the cAMP-binding sites at the cell surface are involved in transmembrane signalling, which is indeed observed for many of the physiological responses inDictyostelium discoideum.
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