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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The pseudoplasmodium (slug) of the cellular slime mould,
Dictyostelium
mucoroides consists of prestalk and prespore cells. These 2 differentiated types of cells were separated by modification of the previous methods using density-gradient centrifugation. Major improvements made in the present study were the use of a density column of different specific gravities and the use of a discontinuous gradient rather than a continuous one. With these improvements, it became possible to obtain efficiently a large number of prestalk and prespore cells. After separation of the 2 types of cells, activities and electrophoretic patterns of some developmentally regulated enzymes were compared. The hydrolases such as beta-glucosidase,
beta-galactosidase
, acetylglucosaminidase and alkaline phosphatase showed higher activities in the prestalk than in the prespore cells. The results are consistent with the fact that more autophagic vacuoles are present in the prestalk than in the prespore cells. On the other hand, UDP-galactose polysaccharide transferase was almost exclusively found in the prespore cells. Electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels of slug, prestalk and prespore extracts showed that one among 4 isozymes of
beta-galactosidase
recognized in the slug extract was present only in the prestalk extract. Electrophoretic patterns of acid phosphatase revealed that one of the two isozymes present in the slug was specifically found in the prestalk cell. Finding of such prestalk specific isozymes was significant, since no specific markers have been known for the prestalk cell.
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PMID:Separation and biochemical characterization of the two cell types present in the pseudoplasmodium of Dictyostelium mucoroides. 56 Oct 87
1. The rates of accumulation (enzyme units/h per 10(8) cells) of a number of glycosidase activities were studied in
Dictyostelium
discoideum cells during the growth and differentiation phases of this organism's life cycle. 2. The rates of accumulation of the enzymes beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase, alpha-glucosidase and
beta-galactosidase
remain unchanged during the growth and early differentiation phases. 3. The considerable changes in specific activity of the enzymes which occur in the early differentiation phase are due to the massive loss of total cellular protein which occurs at this time. 4. Significant alterations can occur in the rates of accumulation of alpha-mannosidase during both the growth and differentiation phases, and since, on the onset of differentiation, beta-glucosidase activity is excreted and degraded, the rate of accumulation of this enzyme differs in the growth and differentiation phases. 5. The characteristic rates of accumulation of all these glycosidases change markedly with changes in the growth conditions of the myxamoebae, and thus these rates of synthesis must be regulated independently; however, addition of cyclic AMP to the growth medium has no effect on them.
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PMID:Rates of accumulation of glycosidase activities during growth and differentiation of Dictyostelium discoideum. 117 88
We investigated the use of the prokaryotic tetracycline operator-repressor system as a regulatory device to control the expression of
Dictyostelium
discoideum tRNA genes. The tetO1 operator fragment was inserted at three different positions in front of a tRNA(Glu) (Am) suppressor gene from D. discoideum, and the tetracycline repressor gene was expressed under the control of a constitutive actin 6 promoter. The effectiveness of this approach was determined by monitoring the expression of a
beta-galactosidase
gene engineered to contain a stop codon that could be suppressed by the tRNA. When these constructs were introduced into
Dictyostelium
cells, the repressor bound to the operator in front of the tRNA gene and prevented expression of the suppressor tRNA. Addition of tetracycline (30 micrograms/ml) to the growth medium prevented repressor binding, allowed expression of the suppressor tRNA, and resulted in
beta-galactosidase
synthesis. The operator-repressor complex interfered with tRNA gene transcription when the operator was inserted immediately upstream (position +1 or -7) of the mature tRNA coding region. Expression of a tRNA gene carrying the operator at position -46 did not respond to repressor binding. This system could be used to control the synthesis of any protein, provided the gene contained a translational stop signal.
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PMID:Establishment of a system for conditional gene expression using an inducible tRNA suppressor gene. 150 1
Polysphondylium pallidum cells were transformed with a construct containing the
Dictyostelium
discoideum ecmA promoter fused to a lacZ reporter gene. Two stably transformed lines, one in which
beta-galactosidase
(beta-gal) is expressed in apical cells of the fruiting body (p63/2.1), and one in which it is expressed in basal cells (p63/D), have enabled us to infer how cells move during aggregation and culmination. Several types of cell movement proposed to occur during slime mold culmination, such as random cell mixing and global cell circulation, can be ruled out on the basis of our observations. Cells of the two transformant lines express beta-gal very early in development. In both cases, stained cells are randomly scattered in a starving population. By mid to late aggregation, characteristic spatial patterns emerge. Marked cells of p63/2.1 are found predominantly at tips of tight aggregates; those of p63/D accumulate at the periphery. These patterns are conserved throughout culmination, showing that marked cells maintain their relative positions within the multicellular mass following aggregation. Neither the apical nor the basal pattern appears to be regulated within the primary sorogen by de novo gene expression or by cell sorting as whorls are formed. However, marked cells within a whorl re-establish the original pattern in secondary sorogens. This must be achieved by cell migration, since beta-gal is not re-expressed.
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PMID:Establishment and maintenance of stable spatial patterns in lacZ fusion transformants of Polysphondylium pallidum. 163 92
The
Dictyostelium
ras gene (Dd-ras) is expressed at a low level in vegetative cells, is not expressed between the onset of development and aggregation, and is then re-expressed in the multicellular aggregate stages from the distal, now cAMP-responsive, promoter and from two more proximal promoters. Expression of activated Dd-ras (G12----T12) (Reymond et al. 1986) results in an abnormal developmental phenotype with the formation of aggregates having multiple tips and an inhibition of further development. In this report we investigate the spatial expression of Dd-ras by fusing the 5'-flanking region to the Escherichia coli lacZ gene and by staining aggregates for
beta-galactosidase
(beta-gal) activity. We show that fusions using 5'-flanking sequences that include all promoters are expressed in approximately 10-20% of the cells randomly scattered within the early aggregate. Our data indicate that these beta-gal-expressing cells migrate to newly formed tips of aggregates and localize in the region that becomes the prestalk zone. Staining is also seen in the very posterior of the organism. The anterior staining appears to be specific for the prestalk A population, and beta-gal activity is subsequently present in stalk cells as developmental proceeds. When only the two more proximal promoters are used to drive lacZ expression, localized staining is seen in the anterior prestalk region, although it is weaker than with the construct carrying all promoters. Moreover, staining is not seen in the posterior domain in the first finger stage, suggesting differences in the spatial expression from the different promoters. Staining is also observed in some cells within the prespore region, which could be anterior-like cells. The pattern of Dd-ras/lacZ staining during tip formation suggests a directed, spiral pattern of cell migration, possibly in response to the proposed spiral gradient of cAMP within the developing aggregate. The pattern of Dd-ras is consistent with the abnormal developmental phenotype caused by expressing an activated Dd-ras Thr12 gene and suggests an essential role for Dd-ras in controlling spatial differentiation.
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PMID:cAMP and cell sorting control the spatial expression of a developmentally essential cell-type-specific ras gene in Dictyostelium. 170 8
The prestalk zone of slugs of
Dictyostelium
discoideum has been shown to contain three subregions in which the extracellular matrix genes ecmA and ecmB are differentially expressed; it is generally thought that these regions are defined by extracellular signals. Using
beta-galactosidase
as a cell marker, we have shown that cells can sort specifically to all three regions. Cells from the posterior-prestalk zone ("prestalk 0 zone") which are injected into the slug tip move within 60 min back to their position of origin. When cells from the anterior prestalk zone (presumably containing a mixture of ecmA and ecmB expressers) are transplanted to the posterior prestalk zone, they move to the tip ("prestalk A zone") within 1 h and about 30 min subsequently are often found in a cone-shaped region within the tip ("prestalk B zone"). Cells transplanted to their own positions do not move significantly within this period. Since the subregions of the prestalk zone can be defined by sorting, it is possible that they are normally formed in this way rather than by position-dependent signals. Cells transplanted without a change in anterior-posterior position and cells which have sorted back to their positions of origin eventually spread out throughout the prestalk zone. This suggests that sorting preferences of cells are respecified. When posterior prestalk cells are transplanted to the prespore zone, respecification of sorting preference is suspended until the cells return to the prestalk zone and anterior-prestalk cells acquire posterior-prestalk sorting preferences.
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PMID:Cell sorting within the prestalk zone of Dictyostelium discoideum. 191 63
We describe the generation of
Dictyostelium
discoideum cell lines that carry different suppressor tRNA genes. These genes were constructed by primer-directed mutagenesis changing a tRNA(Trp)(CCA) gene from D. discoideum to a tRNA(Trp)(amber) gene and changing a tRNA(Glu)(UUC) gene from D. discoideum to a tRNA(Glu)(ochre) as well as a tRNA(Glu)(amber) gene. These genes were stably integrated into the D. discoideum genome together with a reporter gene. An actin 6::lacZ gene fusion carrying corresponding translational stop signals served as a reported. Active
beta-galactosidase
is expressed only in D. discoideum strains that contain, in addition to the reporter, a functional suppressor tRNA. Both amber suppressors are active in D. discoideum without interfering significantly with cell growth and development. We failed, however, to establish cell lines containing a functional tRNA(Glu)(ochre) suppressor. This may be due to the fact that nearly every message from D. discoideum known so far terminates with UAA. Therefore a tRNA capable of reading this termination codon may not be compatible with cell growth.
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PMID:Nonsense suppression in Dictyostelium discoideum. 209 17
Previously, we identified a class of genes in
Dictyostelium
that are prespore cell-type specific in their expression in the multicellular aggregate and are inducible by cAMP acting through cell-surface cAMP receptors. In this paper, we report the cloning and analysis of the regulatory regions controlling the expression of one such gene that encodes a spore coat protein, SP60. By use of a fusion of the firefly luciferase gene and Escherichia coli lacZ [expresses
beta-galactosidase
(beta-gal)], we have identified cis-acting regions required for proper spatial and temporal expression in multicellular aggregates and for cAMP induction in shaking cell culture. Deletion analysis suggests that a CA-rich element (CAE) and surrounding sequences present three times within the 5'-flanking sequence are required for proper regulation. SP60-lacZ fusions that include all three of these regions express lacZ only in the posterior approximately 85% of migrating slugs (prespore zone). Studies show that SP60 is expressed during mid to late aggregation, and SP60-lacZ-positive cells are spatially localized as a doughnut-shaped ring within the forming aggregate. Cells within the skirt that surrounds the aggregate and that are still migrating into the aggregate do not stain. Sequential 5' deletions of CAEs and surrounding regions affect the expression level of SP60-luciferase in response to developmental signals and cAMP, as well as the spatial pattern of SP60-lacZ. Deletion of the first (most 5') of these regions restricts the spatial expression of SP60-lacZ fusions to the anterior of the prespore zone. When both the first and second regions are removed, the expression level drops, and the staining is restricted to the prespore/prestalk boundary. Furthermore, the staining pattern that is seen with these two deletions is present as a gradient from anterior to posterior within the prespore zone. Deletion of all three regions results in a loss of both cAMP and developmentally induced expression. These results suggest the presence of a gradient within the prespore zone that differentially affects the activity of promoters containing different numbers of response elements.
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PMID:A spatial gradient of expression of a cAMP-regulated prespore cell-type-specific gene in Dictyostelium. 216 44
In the cell adhesion of aggregation-competent
Dictyostelium
cells, the requirement for the carbohydrate moiety of the glycoprotein appeared to be indirect in that it acts to protect the protein moiety from proteolytic degradation; however, the effect was limited to the tunicamycin (TM)-sensitive carbohydrate moiety (Hirano, T., et al. (1983) J. Biochem. 93, 1249-1257). In the present study, we showed that the EDTA-stable adhesion of aggregation-competent
Dictyostelium
cells was abolished by the treatment of intact cells with jack bean alpha-mannosidase, whereas neuraminidase,
beta-galactosidase
, beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase, or alpha-L-fucosidase had no effect. The EDTA-stable cohesiveness of TM-treated cells in the presence of leupeptin (TM/LP cells) was also abolished by the treatment of the cells with alpha-mannosidase. The effect of alpha-mannosidase was not prevented in the presence of LP. The N-glycoside-deficient contact site A (an adhesion-mediating glycoprotein) was obtained from TM/LP cells and was shown to have a molecular weight of 70,000. This protein (p 70) was shown to still have carbohydrates as detected by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and subsequent staining of the gel with periodic acid-silver stain. Moreover, p 70 reacted with anti-gp 68, which has a specificity against alpha-mannosyl residues of carbohydrate chains. However, p 70 treated with alpha-mannosidase showed decreased reactivity with anti-gp 68. The monovalent antibody fragment of anti-contact site A or anti-p 70 inhibited EDTA-stable cell adhesion of both control and TM/LP cells. These results indicated that TM-resistant mannosyl residues of contact site A are directly involved in EDTA-stable adhesion of aggregation-competent cells. This is the first report of the direct involvement of the carbohydrate moiety in cell adhesion of aggregation-competent
Dictyostelium
cells. A schematic model is presented of the role of the carbohydrate moiety in EDTA-stable cell adhesion, including the direct effect of carbohydrates.
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PMID:Direct implication of surface mannosyl residues in cell adhesion of Dictyostelium discoideum. 241 9
lambda gt11 phages harboring five different cDNA fragments for the regulatory (R) subunit of
Dictyostelium
discoideum cAMP-dependent protein kinase (CAK) directed the synthesis of this protein in Escherichia coli cells. Crude bacterial extracts were probed with an antiserum against the
Dictyostelium
R subunit. The presence of specific epitopes for the R subunit in a given extract was compared with high-affinity cAMP-binding activity and with the ability to inhibit the catalytic (C) subunit through protein-protein interaction. The expression and the biochemical properties of these proteins were correlated with their cDNA nucleotide sequence. The results show that the
Dictyostelium
R subunit can be functionally expressed in E. coli cells either as a fusion protein with
beta-galactosidase
or as a nonfusion protein. In both cases, the products of cDNA clones containing the entire coding sequence retained high-affinity cAMP-binding activity and the capacity to interact with the catalytic subunit. One of the fusions, lacking the 94 N-terminal residues, failed to inhibit catalytic activity, although it bound cAMP with an affinity similar to that of the native R protein from D. discoideum.
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PMID:Expression and properties of the regulatory subunit of Dictyostelium cAMP-dependent protein kinase encoded by lambda gt11 cDNA clones. 245 May 71
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