Affiliation:
1. Theoretical Biology and Bioinformatics, University of Utrecht,
Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht, The Netherlands
Abstract
When individual amoebae of the cellular slime mold
Dictyostelium discoideum
are starving,
they aggregate to form a multicellular migrating slug, which moves
toward a region suitable for culmination. The culmination of the
morphogenesis involves complex cell movements that transform a mound of
cells into a globule of spores on a slender stalk. The movement has
been likened to a “reverse fountain,” whereby prestalk cells in
the upper part form a stalk that moves downwards and anchors to the
substratum, while prespore cells in the lower part move upwards to form
the spore head. So far, however, no satisfactory explanation has been
produced for this process. Using a computer simulation that we
developed, we now demonstrate that the processes that are essential
during the earlier stages of the morphogenesis are in fact sufficient
to produce the dynamics of the culmination stage. These processes are
cAMP signaling, differential adhesion, cell differentiation, and
production of extracellular matrix. Our model clarifies the processes
that generate the observed cell movements. More specifically, we show
that periodic upward movements, caused by chemotactic motion, are
essential for successful culmination, because the pressure waves they
induce squeeze the stalk downwards through the cell mass. The
mechanisms revealed by our model have a number of self-organizing and
self-correcting properties and can account for many previously
unconnected and unexplained experimental observations.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
209 articles.
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