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A study of PstB cells during Dictyostelium migration and culmination reveals a unidirectional cell type conversion process

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Summary

The prestalk region of the Dictyostelium slug has recently been shown by Williams and his collaborators to consist of two distinct cell types, pstA and pstB cells. Here the movement of these cells in both the slug and culmination stages has been examined with the use of vital dyes. In the slug some of the pstB cells are continually lost from the prestalk region as small clusters of cells. These cells move through the prespore region and temporarily lie in the rearguard region at the posterior end of the slug. They are finally left in the slug's slime track as single cells or groups of a few cells. When culmination is initiated the pstB cells move as a whole from the prestalk region to the base where they join the rearguard cells to form the basal disc of the fruiting body. Transplantation experiments reveal that the rearguard cells form an outer ring portion of the basal disc and the pstB cells form an inner portion to which the stalk attaches. The continuous loss of one cell type during the slug stage without any change in cell type proportions suggests that cell types are redifferentiating. Grafting and transplantation experiments reveal that there is a unidirectional flow of cells through successive steps of cell type conversion. Prespore cells redifferentiate as anterior-like cells which migrate to the prestalk region and become pstA cells. The pstA cells then replace the pstB cells that are lost from the slug.

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Sternfeld, J. A study of PstB cells during Dictyostelium migration and culmination reveals a unidirectional cell type conversion process. Roux's Arch Dev Biol 201, 354–363 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00365123

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