» Articles » PMID: 2844774

Ligand-induced Phosphorylation of the CAMP Receptor from Dictyostelium Discoideum

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1988 Oct 5
PMID 2844774
Citations 27
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The cell surface cAMP receptor of Dictyostelium discoideum exists as a doublet of low (D) and high (R) electrophoretic mobility forms, both of which are phosphorylated in vivo. The R form is phosphorylated in a ligand-independent manner, while conversion of the R to D forms, induced by the chemoattractant, is accompanied by at least a 4-fold increase in the level of phosphorylation. When cells are stimulated with saturating levels of cAMP, increased phosphorylation is detectable within 5 s and reaches maximum levels by 5 min with a t1/2 of 45 s. Dephosphorylation of receptor, initiated by removal of the stimulus, is detectable within 30 s, has a half-time of 2 min, and reaches a plateau by 20 min. At half-maximal occupancy, phosphorylation occurred more slowly than at saturation, t1/2 = 1.5 min, and remained at intermediate levels until the cAMP concentration was increased. Accompanying electrophoretic mobility shifts occurred in all cases with similar, though not identical, kinetics. Both phosphorylation and mobility shift were half-maximal at 5 nM cAMP and saturated at 100 nM. Estimation of the specific activity of each receptor form indicates that not all sites are phosphorylated during the R to D transition; at least half of the sites are phosphorylated after the transition is completed. The rate of incorporation of phosphates into the receptor, held in the D form by cAMP, was less than one-third the rate of ligand-induced incorporation starting with the R form and was approximately twice the basal rate of incorporation. These results are compatible with ligand-induced receptor phosphorylation being an early event in the adaptation of other cAMP-induced responses.

Citing Articles

Cyclic AMP induction of Dictyostelium prespore gene expression requires autophagy.

Yamada Y, Schaap P Dev Biol. 2019; 452(2):114-126.

PMID: 31051160 PMC: 6598861. DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2019.04.017.


A Model for Direction Sensing in Dictyostelium discoideum: Ras Activity and Symmetry Breaking Driven by a Gβγ-Mediated, Gα2-Ric8 -- Dependent Signal Transduction Network.

Cheng Y, Othmer H PLoS Comput Biol. 2016; 12(5):e1004900.

PMID: 27152956 PMC: 4859573. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004900.


Phosphorylation of chemoattractant receptors regulates chemotaxis, actin reorganization and signal relay.

Brzostowski J, Sawai S, Rozov O, Liao X, Imoto D, Parent C J Cell Sci. 2013; 126(Pt 20):4614-26.

PMID: 23902692 PMC: 3795335. DOI: 10.1242/jcs.122952.


Chemoattractant stimulation of TORC2 is regulated by receptor/G protein-targeted inhibitory mechanisms that function upstream and independently of an essential GEF/Ras activation pathway in Dictyostelium.

Liao X, Buggey J, Lee Y, Kimmel A Mol Biol Cell. 2013; 24(13):2146-55.

PMID: 23657816 PMC: 3694798. DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E13-03-0130.


Cells navigate with a local-excitation, global-inhibition-biased excitable network.

Xiong Y, Huang C, Iglesias P, Devreotes P Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010; 107(40):17079-86.

PMID: 20864631 PMC: 2951443. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1011271107.