Studies of Early Stages of Differentiation of the Cellular Slime Mould Dictyostellium discoideum

Countercurrent distribution in a polymer, two-phase system has been used to study changes in the cell surface properties of amoebae of D. discoideum . Amoebae harvested during exponential growth in axenic culture and during the subsequent first six hours of development on Millipore filters were dist...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of embryology and experimental morphology Vol. 67; pp. 181 - 193
Main Authors Sharpe, P T, Treffry, TE, Watts, D J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.01.1982
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Countercurrent distribution in a polymer, two-phase system has been used to study changes in the cell surface properties of amoebae of D. discoideum . Amoebae harvested during exponential growth in axenic culture and during the subsequent first six hours of development on Millipore filters were distributed as a single peak, However, the position of the peak changed during the period of early development which showed that changes in cell surface properties were occurring. At aggregation (8 h), the peak markedly broaderned, indicating considerable increase in cell surface heterogeneity amongst the amoebae, and heterogeneity was so great by 9-10 h that the amoebae distributed as two peaks, Amoebae from one peak were shown to be precursors of spores while amoebae from the other peak appeared to be precursors of stalk cells. Similarly, amoebae from the trailing and leading edges of the broad peak, formed from amoebae beginning to aggregate (8 h), were found to have different fates. Thus cell differentiation had been found at times of development prior to formation of aggregates having apical tips or anterior-posterior polarity and neither of these features of aggregates can be essential for initiation of cell differentiation. It is therefore concluded that differentiation is not initiated in D. discoideum in response to "positional information".
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
content type line 23
ObjectType-Feature-1
ISSN:0022-0752