Affiliation:
1. Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tennodai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
2. Sugashima Marine Biological Laboratory, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University, Sugashima, Toba, Mie, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Sexual reproduction is essential for the maintenance of species in a wide variety of multicellular organisms, and even unicellular organisms that normally proliferate asexually possess a sexual cycle because of its contribution to increased genetic diversity. Information concerning the molecules involved in fertilization is accumulating for many species of the metazoan, plant, and fungal lineages, and the evolutionary consideration of sexual reproduction systems is now an interesting issue. Macrocyst formation in the social amoeba
Dictyostelium discoideum
is a sexual process in which cells become sexually mature under dark and submerged conditions and fuse with complementary mating-type cells. In the present study, we isolated
D. discoideum
insertional mutants defective in sexual cell fusion and identified the relevant gene,
macA
, which encodes a highly glycosylated, 2,041-amino-acid membrane protein (MacA). Although its overall similarity is restricted to proteins of unknown function within dictyostelids, it contains LamGL and discoidin domains, which are implicated in cell adhesion. The growth and development of
macA
-null mutants were indistinguishable from those of the parental strain. The overexpression of
macA
using the V18 promoter in a
macA
-null mutant completely restored its sexual defects. Although the
macA
gene encoded exactly the same protein in a complementary mating-type strain, it was expressed at a much lower level. These results suggest that MacA is indispensable for gamete interactions in
D. discoideum
, probably via cell adhesion. There is a possibility that it is controlled in a mating-type-dependent manner.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
12 articles.
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