CSM News Electronic Edition Volume 4, number 16 May 6, 1995 Please submit abstracts of your papers as soon as they have been accepted for publication by sending them to CSM-News@worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu. Back issues of CSM-News, the CSM Reference database and other useful information is available by anonymous ftp from worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu [165.124.233.50], via Gopher at the same address, or by World Wide Web at the URL "http://worms.cmsbio.nwu.edu/dicty.html" =========== Abstracts =========== Patterns of free calcium in multicellular stages of Dictyostelium expressing jellyfish apoaequorin Andrew B. Cubitt1,2, Richard A. Firtel2, Gabriele Fischer1,3, Lionel F. Jaffe1,*, and Andrew L. Miller1 1 Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA 2 Department of Biology, Center for Molecular Genetics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA 3 Fakultat fur Biologie, Universitat Konstanz, D-78434 Konstanz, Germany * Author for correspondence Development, in press. SUMMARY To examine the patterns of high free cytosolic calcium or [Ca2+]i during Dictyostelium's development, we expressed apoaequorin in D. discoideum, reconstituted aequorin and observed the resultant patterns of calcium-dependent luminescence. Specific, high calcium zones are seen throughout normal multicellular development and are roughly coincident with those regions that later differentiate into stalk or stalk-like cells. A slug, for example, shows a primary high calcium zone within its front quarter and a secondary one around its tail; while a mound shows such a zone around the periphery of its base. Combined with previous evidence, our findings support the hypothesis that high [Ca2+]i feeds back to favor the stalk pathway. We also discovered several high calcium zones within the mound's base that do not coincide with any known prepatterns in D. discoideum. These include two, relatively persistent, antipodal strips along the mound's periphery. These various persistent zones of high calcium are largely made up of frequent, 10 to 30 second long, semiperiodic calcium spikes. Each of these spikes generates a correspondingly short-lived, 200 to 500 microns long, high calcium band which extends along the nearby surface. Similar, but relatively large and infrequent, spikes generate cross bands which extend across migrating slugs and just behind their advancing tips as well as across the peripheries of rotating mounds and midway between their antipodal strips. Moreover, calcium has a doubling time of about a second as various spikes rise. This last observation suggests that the calcium bands seen in Dictyostelium may be generated by so-called fast calcium waves. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Capping protein levels influence actin assembly and cell motility in Dictyostelium. C. Hug, P. Y. Jay, I. Reddy, J. G. McNally, P. C. Bridgman, E. L. Elson and J. A. Cooper. Cell, in press Actin assembly is important for cell motility, but the mechanism of assembly and how it relates to motility in vivo is largely unknown. In vitro, actin assembly can be controlled by proteins, such as capping protein, that bind filament ends. To investigate the function of actin assembly in vivo, we altered the levels of capping protein in Dictyostelium cells, and found changes in resting and chemoattractant-induced actin assembly that were consistent with capping protein's in vitro properties of capping but not nucleation. Significantly, overexpressers moved faster and underexpressers moved slower than control cells. Mutants also exhibited changes in cytoskeleton architecture. These results provide new insights into in vivo actin assembly and the actin cytoskeleton's role in motility. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [End CSM-News, volume 4, number 16]