Adventures in Multicellularity

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Adventures in Multicellularity The social amoeba (a.k.a. slime molds) Dictyostelium discoideum

Transcript of Adventures in Multicellularity

Page 1: Adventures in Multicellularity

Adventures in Multicellularity

The social amoeba (a.k.a. slime molds)

Dictyostelium discoideum

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Dictyostelium discoideum

ÿ the most studied of the social amoebae / cellular slime molds

ÿ predatory soil amoeba that feeds on a variety of microorganisms anddecaying matter

(in the lab exist primarily on a diet of E. coli although strains have been selected that grow on complex media alone).

ÿ asexually reproducing amoebae (unicellular) under conditions when food isabundant

ÿ under starvation conditions a complex developmental cycle is initiated – anadventure in multicellularity.

ÿ they have features of both plants and animals• cellulose and development of spores (plant-like)• cell movements involved in morphogenesis (animal-like)

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Embryogenesis Dictyostelium Development

Aggregation of manyidentical cells

Successive divisionsof large precursorcell (zygote)

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The Natural History of Dictyostelium discoideum

Vegetative Cycle:

Amoeba lives solitary existencefeeding on bacteria

Reproduce by binary fission (i.e.divide in half)

Continues as long as food isavailable

Feeding is by phagocytosis – essentiallyengulfing their prey with membrane.

RH Kessin (2001)

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The Natural History of Dictyostelium discoideum

Chemotaxis and Aggregation:

When the cells begin to starve, theybegin a developmental cycle

They produce and release cAMPthat acts as a chemoattractant andalso as a signaling molecule

The cells comes together (streaming)to form a multicellular tippedaggregate .

This elaborates into a finger orstanding slug

RH Kessin (2001)

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The Natural History of Dictyostelium discoideum

The standing slug has two fates – itcan topple over and become amigrating slug or it can proceed todevelop into a fruiting body. Theelaboration of the fruiting bodybegins with culmination

RH Kessin (2001)

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The Natural History of Dictyostelium discoideum

Scanning electron micrographs ofthe different stages of development

RH Kessin (2001)

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The Natural History of Dictyostelium discoideum

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1. Chemotaxis to signals producedcoordinately by the cells(primitive morphogens)

2. Aggregation and cell adhesion(primitive patterning andmulticellularity)

3. Differentiation and patterning inthe migrating slug andfruiting body (primitivepolarity)

4. Competition to be spores(cheating)

RH Kessin (2001)

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The Natural History of Dictyostelium discoideum

Enclosed in a sheath (muco-polysaccharide and cellulose)

The tip is a specialized group ofcells that control development(remove it and development stops until anew tip is formed)

Under the control of the tip theaggregate elongates and forms thestanding slug.

RH Kessin (2001)

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The Natural History of Dictyostelium discoideum

The slug typically contains about100,000 cells and behaves as asingle entity. It is capable of bothphototaxis and thermotaxis.

RH Kessin (2001)

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Dictyostelium aggregates have many properties of an embryo :

• They are essentially a multicellular entity enclosed within a sheath

• They have polarity

• They have exquisite proportioning (1/5 prespore ; 4/5 prestalk)

• They have an organizing center (tip)

• morphogenesis involves cell movements

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The essential steps in cell motility

RH Kessin (2001)

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Three dimensional reconstruction of a D. discoideumamoebae moving towards a cAMP gradient.

cAMP source

cAMP

Wessel and Soll, Univ. of Iowa

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Chemotaxis of single cell towards a point source of cAMP.

The tip of the capillary tube is the source of cAMP. See howquickly the cell responds to changes in concentration. Note thenumber of pseudopodia protrusions in the amoeba.

Time hr:min:sec:

G. Gerisch, Max Planck Institute, GDR

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D. discoideum amoebae chemotaxing toward cAMP

Cells are expressing a GFP-coronin fusion protein: coronin is acytoskeletal protein that is localized in the extended pseudopods.

G. Gerisch, Max Planck Institute, GDR

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Starvation and cAMP signaling

During starvation, cells develop the ability tosynthesize, detect and degrade cAMP.

When one cell releases a pulse of cAMP (1),neighboring cells detect it and move up thegradient towards the source (2) .

After a delay of about one minute these cellsrelease cAMP of there own (2) and processgets repeated about every six minutes (3).

This process results in waves of migration (4).

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RH Kessin (2001)

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Star logo simulation

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Aggregation patterns

The patterns of aggregation can beseen by dark-field microscopybecause moving and stationary cellsreflect light differently – movingcells appear lighter.

Note the waves of cAMP tend to propagatefrom a central point (‘organizing center’)

RH Kessin (2001)

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Dark waves of D. discoideum cells on caffeine agar. Movieconstructed from 36 seconds intervals.(F. Siegert and C.J. Weijer J.Cell Sci. 93:325-335 (1989))

Aggregation Patterns

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Core of a Spiral Wave in Aggregating D. discoideum cells

10 sec between images

Siegert and Weijer, J. Cell Sci. 93:325-335.

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Siegert and Weijer, Curr Biol 1995

Rotation of cells within the mound.

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The classical studies of Raper (1940’s)

RH Kessin (2001)

Prestalk and prespore cells do not mix throughout development.

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The classical studies of Raper (1940’s)

RH Kessin (2001)

The tip controls events in the slug.

Apical fractions from foreign slugs (B-D) were grafted onto anormal slug. Four independent slugs emerge after ~45 min.

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JT Bonner (2000)

Positional Sorting of Prestalk and Prespore cells within the slug

Prestalk cells were grafted onto theanterior end of a slug.

These cells eventually migrate tothe proper position at the posteriorend of the slug.

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JT Bonner (2000)

There is little mixing of prestalk and prespore cells in the slug.

The prestalk cells at the tip move morerapidly in the slug than the pre-spore cells.

Prestalk Prespore

This study used an ingenious method developed by Bonner to generate “twodimensional” slugs. They could contain as few as 50 cells (typical slugs have >100,000 cells) but the correct proportioning of prestalk and prespore cells wasalways maintained.

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Wolpert, 1998

Movement of Cell Types During Culmination

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Weijer, Univ. of Dundee

Note that cells move more rapidly in the tip (prestalkcells) than in the body of the slug (prespore cells). Notealso that the tip is further partitioned into Prestalk a ndPrestalk O cells.

Movement of Prestalk Cells in the Slug

Two types of prestalk cells:1) Green (GFP labeled) Prestalk A cells2) Red (red-shifted GFP labeled) Prestalk O cells

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Weijer, Univ. of Dundee

Movement of Prestalk Cells During Culmination

Two types of prestalk cells:1) Green (GFP labeled) Prestalk A cells2) Red (red-shifted GFP labeled) Prestalk O cells

Watch closely for the movement of prestalk cellsdown the core of the culminating slug.

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Mound formation can be described by two assumptions: 1.) by considering thepopulation of cells as an excitable medium and 2.) by considering cell movementas the flow of a compressible liquid. The cell movement (fluid flow) is controlledby chemotactic forces dependent on increasing concentrations of the cAMP. Themodel allows to describe the whole early development from isolated single cellsinto bifurcating aggregation streams to the formation of a 3-dimensional,hemispherical mound, (see Vasiev B., Siegert F. & C. J.Weijer (1997), J.Theor.Biol. 184, 441-450

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A three dimensional hybrid cellular automata/partial differentialequation model capable of describing the morphogenesis ofDictyostelium discoideum “from single cells to crawling slug".Using simple local interactions we can achieve the morphogenesiswith only three processes: production of and chemotaxis to cAMPand cellular adhesion. The interplay of these processes causes theamoebae to spatially self-organize leading to the complex behaviourof stream and mound formation, cell sorting and slug migration allwithout any change of parameters. Our model describes thesubstrate for morphogenesis on which higher cell functions canoperate.

Savill and Hogeweg (1997) J. Theor. Biol. 184:0229-235.

http://www-binf.bio.uu.nl/~njs/dicy.html

P. Hogeweg et al Model of Development (Univ. of Utrecht)

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Streaming and Mound Formation

Hogeweg Model (cont’d)

• Each amoeba is represented by connected automata in CA system (notjust as a single cell)

• Cell-cell adhesion an chemotaxis are represented as simple CA rules

• Amoeba are not rigidly defined by the number of cells but can fluctuateslightly allowing flexible interactions and movements past one another

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cAMP waves

Slug development

Hogeweg Model (cont’d)

Yellow PrestalkGreen Prespore

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Siegert and Weijer, J. Cell Sci. 93:325-335.

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General References:

First Signals : Evolution of Multicellular Development.J.T. Bonner (2000)Princeton University Press

Dictyostelium: Evolution, Cell Biology and the Development of Multicellularity.Richard H. Kessin (2001)Cambridge University Press

Web sites containing numerous links to research sites, resources and databases:

http://dicty.cmb.nmu.edu/dicty/dicty.html

http://dictybase.org/dicty.html