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Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation

BACKGROUND: Dictyostelium cells secrete the proteins AprA and CfaD. Cells lacking either AprA or CfaD proliferate faster than wild type, while AprA or CfaD overexpressor cells proliferate slowly, indicating that AprA and CfaD are autocrine factors that repress proliferation. CfaD interacts with AprA...

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Autores principales: Choe, Jonathan M, Bakthavatsalam, Deenadayalan, Phillips, Jonathan E, Gomer, Richard H
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2644720/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19187549
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2091-10-4
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author Choe, Jonathan M
Bakthavatsalam, Deenadayalan
Phillips, Jonathan E
Gomer, Richard H
author_facet Choe, Jonathan M
Bakthavatsalam, Deenadayalan
Phillips, Jonathan E
Gomer, Richard H
author_sort Choe, Jonathan M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dictyostelium cells secrete the proteins AprA and CfaD. Cells lacking either AprA or CfaD proliferate faster than wild type, while AprA or CfaD overexpressor cells proliferate slowly, indicating that AprA and CfaD are autocrine factors that repress proliferation. CfaD interacts with AprA and requires the presence of AprA to slow proliferation. To determine if CfaD is necessary for the ability of AprA to slow proliferation, whether AprA binds to cells, and if so whether the binding requires the presence of CfaD, we examined the binding and effect on proliferation of recombinant AprA. RESULTS: We find that the extracellular accumulation of AprA increases with cell density and reaches a concentration of 0.3 μg/ml near a stationary cell density. When added to wild-type or aprA(- )cells, recombinant AprA (rAprA) significantly slows proliferation at 0.1 μg/ml and higher concentrations. From 4 to 64 μg/ml, the effect of rAprA is at a plateau, slowing but not stopping proliferation. The proliferation-inhibiting activity of rAprA is roughly the same as that of native AprA in conditioned growth medium. Proliferating aprA(- )cells show saturable binding of rAprA to 92,000 ± 11,000 cell-surface receptors with a K(D )of 0.03 ± 0.02 μg/ml. There appears to be one class of binding site, and no apparent cooperativity. Native AprA inhibits the binding of rAprA to aprA(- )cells with a K(i )of 0.03 μg/ml, suggesting that the binding kinetics of rAprA are similar to those of native AprA. The proliferation of cells lacking CrlA, a cAMP receptor-like protein, or cells lacking CfaD are not affected by rAprA. Surprisingly, both cell types still bind rAprA. CONCLUSION: Together, the data suggest that AprA functions as an autocrine proliferation-inhibiting factor by binding to cell surface receptors. Although AprA requires CfaD for activity, it does not require CfaD to bind to cells, suggesting the possibility that cells have an AprA receptor and a CfaD receptor, and activation of both receptors is required to slow proliferation. We previously found that crlA(- )cells are sensitive to CfaD. Combined with the results presented here, this suggests that CrlA is not the AprA or CfaD receptor, and may be the receptor for an unknown third factor that is required for AprA and CfaD activity.
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spelling pubmed-26447202009-02-19 Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation Choe, Jonathan M Bakthavatsalam, Deenadayalan Phillips, Jonathan E Gomer, Richard H BMC Biochem Research Article BACKGROUND: Dictyostelium cells secrete the proteins AprA and CfaD. Cells lacking either AprA or CfaD proliferate faster than wild type, while AprA or CfaD overexpressor cells proliferate slowly, indicating that AprA and CfaD are autocrine factors that repress proliferation. CfaD interacts with AprA and requires the presence of AprA to slow proliferation. To determine if CfaD is necessary for the ability of AprA to slow proliferation, whether AprA binds to cells, and if so whether the binding requires the presence of CfaD, we examined the binding and effect on proliferation of recombinant AprA. RESULTS: We find that the extracellular accumulation of AprA increases with cell density and reaches a concentration of 0.3 μg/ml near a stationary cell density. When added to wild-type or aprA(- )cells, recombinant AprA (rAprA) significantly slows proliferation at 0.1 μg/ml and higher concentrations. From 4 to 64 μg/ml, the effect of rAprA is at a plateau, slowing but not stopping proliferation. The proliferation-inhibiting activity of rAprA is roughly the same as that of native AprA in conditioned growth medium. Proliferating aprA(- )cells show saturable binding of rAprA to 92,000 ± 11,000 cell-surface receptors with a K(D )of 0.03 ± 0.02 μg/ml. There appears to be one class of binding site, and no apparent cooperativity. Native AprA inhibits the binding of rAprA to aprA(- )cells with a K(i )of 0.03 μg/ml, suggesting that the binding kinetics of rAprA are similar to those of native AprA. The proliferation of cells lacking CrlA, a cAMP receptor-like protein, or cells lacking CfaD are not affected by rAprA. Surprisingly, both cell types still bind rAprA. CONCLUSION: Together, the data suggest that AprA functions as an autocrine proliferation-inhibiting factor by binding to cell surface receptors. Although AprA requires CfaD for activity, it does not require CfaD to bind to cells, suggesting the possibility that cells have an AprA receptor and a CfaD receptor, and activation of both receptors is required to slow proliferation. We previously found that crlA(- )cells are sensitive to CfaD. Combined with the results presented here, this suggests that CrlA is not the AprA or CfaD receptor, and may be the receptor for an unknown third factor that is required for AprA and CfaD activity. BioMed Central 2009-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2644720/ /pubmed/19187549 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2091-10-4 Text en Copyright © 2009 Choe et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Choe, Jonathan M
Bakthavatsalam, Deenadayalan
Phillips, Jonathan E
Gomer, Richard H
Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation
title Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation
title_full Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation
title_fullStr Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation
title_full_unstemmed Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation
title_short Dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation
title_sort dictyostelium cells bind a secreted autocrine factor that represses cell proliferation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2644720/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19187549
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2091-10-4
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