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Development ePress online publication date 22 Feb 2006
doi: 10.1242/dev.02287


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RESEARCH ARTICLE

A retinoblastoma ortholog controls stalk/spore preference in Dictyostelium


Harry MacWilliams*, Kimchi Doquang, Roberto Pedrola, Gytha Dollman, Daniela Grassi, Thomas Peis, Adrian Tsang, and Adriano Ceccarelli
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: macw{at}zi.biologie.uni-muenchen.de)

We describe rblA, the Dictyostelium ortholog of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene Rb. In the growth phase, rblA expression is correlated with several factors that lead to 'preference' for the spore pathway. During multicellular development, expression increases 200-fold in differentiating spores. rblA-null strains differentiate stalk cells and spores normally, but in chimeras with wild type, the mutant shows a strong preference for the stalk pathway. rblA-null cells are hypersensitive to the stalk morphogen DIF, suggesting that rblA normally suppresses the DIF response in cells destined for the spore pathway. rblA overexpression during growth leads to G1 arrest, but as growing Dictyostelium are overwhelmingly in G2 phase, rblA does not seem to be important in the normal cell cycle. rblA-null cells show reduced cell size and a premature growth-development transition; the latter appears anomalous but may reflect selection pressures acting on social ameba.


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T. Muramoto and J. R. Chubb
Live imaging of the Dictyostelium cell cycle reveals widespread S phase during development, a G2 bias in spore differentiation and a premitotic checkpoint
Development, May 1, 2008; 135(9): 1647 - 1657.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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