Back to Search Start Over

Dictyostelium cell death

Authors :
Chantal de Chastellier
Richard L. Blanton
Pierre Golstein
Jean-Pierre Levraud
Marie-Françoise Luciani
Myriam Adam
Source :
Journal of Cell Biology. 160:1105-1114
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2003.

Abstract

Cell death in the stalk of Dictyostelium discoideum, a prototypic vacuolar cell death, can be studied in vitro using cells differentiating as a monolayer. To identify early events, we examined potentially dying cells at a time when the classical signs of Dictyostelium cell death, such as heavy vacuolization and membrane lesions, were not yet apparent. We observed that most cells proceeded through a stereotyped series of differentiation stages, including the emergence of “paddle” cells showing high motility and strikingly marked subcellular compartmentalization with actin segregation. Paddle cell emergence and subsequent demise with paddle-to-round cell transition may be critical to the cell death process, as they were contemporary with irreversibility assessed through time-lapse videos and clonogenicity tests. Paddle cell demise was not related to formation of the cellulose shell because cells where the cellulose-synthase gene had been inactivated underwent death indistinguishable from that of parental cells. A major subcellular alteration at the paddle-to-round cell transition was the disappearance of F-actin. The Dictyostelium vacuolar cell death pathway thus does not require cellulose synthesis and includes early actin rearrangements (F-actin segregation, then depolymerization), contemporary with irreversibility, corresponding to the emergence and demise of highly polarized paddle cells.

Details

ISSN :
15408140 and 00219525
Volume :
160
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cell Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c8ece1384f11b1e3986aa555748ba3c7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200212104