Abstract

The following was recently reported by Bonner et al. (1995): (1) Rapid differentiation occurred into two zones in Dictyostelium discoideum cells confined in a fine glass capillary. The cells in the anterior zone exposed to the air appear similar to prestalk cells, while the posterior zone isolated from the air mimics prespore cells. (2) The volumes of the two zones are proportional to each other for different sized cell masses, and the proportion is the same as that in normal migrating slugs. We investigated the nature of this newly discovered rapid differentiation in a slightly modified geometry. Exponentially growing cells were harvested, washed to remove external nutrients, and pelleted by centrifugation. Subsequently, a small drop of the pelleted (starved) cells was placed on a slide glass and then confined in a two-dimensional space between the slide glass and a coverslip, with help of spacers whose thickness varied from 25 to 100 microm. As a result, a dark zone, which looked optically different, emerged within several minutes in the periphery of the disc of the confined cells, corresponding to the zonation in a capillary as previously reported. When the width of the peripheral zone was measured for more than 30 samples of different diameters for each thickness of the spacers, the width was found to be always about 100 microm, irrespective of the size difference of the cell mass placed. This seems to be contradictory to the previous observation made by Bonner et al. (1995). We also examined oxygen concentration dependence on the zone width. The zone width was found to be independent of the oxygen concentration at low concentrations, but increased rapidly at high concentrations. A reaction-diffusion mechanism for formation of the zone and possible involvement of atmospheric oxygen (O2) in the initial steps of cell differentiation and pattern formation is discussed.

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