A New Environmentally Resistant Cell Type from Dictyostelium
Overview
Affiliations
This paper describes the serendipitous discovery and first characterization of a new resistant cell type from Dictyostelium, for which the name aspidocyte (from aspis: Greek for shield) is proposed. These cells are induced from amoebae by a range of toxins including heavy metals and antibiotics, and were first detected by their striking resistance to detergent lysis. Aspidocytes are separate, rounded or irregular-shaped cells, which are immotile but remain fully viable; once the toxic stress is removed, they revert to amoeboid cells within an hour. Induction takes a few hours and is completely blocked by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. Aspidocytes lack a cell wall and their resistance to detergent lysis is active, requiring continued energy metabolism, and may be assisted by a complete cessation of endocytosis, as measured by uptake of the dye FM1-43. Microarray analysis shows that aspidocytes have a distinct pattern of gene expression, with a number of genes up-regulated that are predicted to be involved in lipid metabolism. Aspidocytes were initially detected in a hypersensitive mutant, in which the AMP deaminase gene is disrupted, suggesting that the inductive pathway involves AMP levels or metabolism. Since aspidocytes can also be induced from wild-type cells and are much more resistant than amoebae to a membrane-disrupting antibiotic, it is possible that they are an adaptation allowing Dictyostelium cells to survive a sudden onslaught of toxins in the wild.
Actin dynamics in protein homeostasis.
Williams T, Rousseau A Biosci Rep. 2022; 42(9).
PMID: 36043949 PMC: 9469105. DOI: 10.1042/BSR20210848.
Dominguez-Martin E, Hernandez-Elvira M, Vincent O, Coria R, Escalante R Cells. 2018; 7(6).
PMID: 29890774 PMC: 6025073. DOI: 10.3390/cells7060056.
Targets downstream of Cdk8 in Dictyostelium development.
Greene D, Bloomfield G, Skelton J, Ivens A, Pears C BMC Dev Biol. 2011; 11:2.
PMID: 21255384 PMC: 3037916. DOI: 10.1186/1471-213X-11-2.
An anatomy ontology to represent biological knowledge in Dictyostelium discoideum.
Gaudet P, Williams J, Fey P, Chisholm R BMC Genomics. 2008; 9:130.
PMID: 18366659 PMC: 2323390. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-130.
My 2,000 best films: parallel phenotyping of Dictyostelium development.
Bloomfield G, Kay R Genome Biol. 2007; 8(7):220.
PMID: 17666111 PMC: 2323213. DOI: 10.1186/gb-2007-8-7-220.