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1.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1407: 123-30, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27271898

ABSTRACT

Increasing concern regarding the use of animals in research has triggered a growing need for non-animal research models in a range of fields. The development of 3Rs (replacement, refinement, and reduction) approaches in research, to reduce the reliance on the use of animal tissue and whole-animal experiments, has recently included the use of Dictyostelium. In addition to not feeling pain and thus being relatively free of ethical constraints, Dictyostelium provides a range of distinct methodological advantages for researchers that has led to a number of breakthroughs. These methodologies include using cell behavior (cell movement and shape) as a rapid indicator of sensitivity to poorly characterized medicines, natural products, and other chemicals to help understand the molecular mechanism of action of compounds. Here, we outline a general approach to employing Dictyostelium as a 3Rs research model, using cell behavior as a readout to better understand how compounds, such as the active ingredient in chilli peppers, capsaicin, function at a cellular level. This chapter helps scientists unfamiliar with Dictyostelium to rapidly employ it as an advantageous model system for research, to reduce the use of animals in research, and to make paradigm shift advances in our understanding of biological chemistry.


Subject(s)
Dictyostelium/drug effects , Dictyostelium/genetics , Pharmacogenetics , Research , Animal Testing Alternatives , Capsaicin/pharmacology , Cell Movement/drug effects , Cells, Cultured , Dictyostelium/metabolism , Drug Resistance , Microscopy , Molecular Imaging , Mutation , Pharmacogenetics/methods , Signal Transduction , Time-Lapse Imaging
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(32): 11703-8, 2014 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25074921

ABSTRACT

Two motors can drive extension of the leading edge of motile cells: actin polymerization and myosin-driven contraction of the cortex, producing fluid pressure and the formation of blebs. Dictyostelium cells can move with both blebs and actin-driven pseudopods at the same time, and blebs, like pseudopods, can be orientated by chemotactic gradients. Here we ask how bleb sites are selected and how the two forms of projection cooperate. We show that membrane curvature is an important, yet overlooked, factor. Dictyostelium cells were observed moving under agarose, which efficiently induces blebbing, and the dynamics of membrane deformations were analyzed. Blebs preferentially originate from negatively curved regions, generated on the flanks of either extending pseudopods or blebs themselves. This is true of cells at different developmental stages, chemotaxing to either folate or cyclic AMP and moving with both blebs and pseudopods or with blebs only. A physical model of blebbing suggests that detachment of the cell membrane is facilitated in concave areas of the cell, where membrane tension produces an outward directed force, as opposed to pulling inward in convex regions. Our findings assign a role to membrane tension in spatially coupling blebs and pseudopods, thus contributing to clustering protrusions to the cell front.


Subject(s)
Cell Surface Extensions/physiology , Chemotaxis/physiology , Pseudopodia/physiology , Actins/metabolism , Animals , Biophysical Phenomena , Cell Polarity/physiology , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Dictyostelium/physiology , Folic Acid/metabolism , Fundulidae , Models, Biological , Protozoan Proteins/metabolism
3.
Dev Biol ; 382(2): 496-503, 2013 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23876427

ABSTRACT

Convergent extension (CE) is a conserved morphogenetic movement that drives axial lengthening of the primary body axis and depends on the planar cell polarity (PCP) pathway. In Drosophila epithelia, a polarised subcellular accumulation of PCP core components, such as Dishevelled (Dvl) protein, is associated with PCP function. Dvl has long been thought to accumulate in the mediolateral protrusions in Xenopus chordamesoderm cells undergoing CE. Here we present a quantitative analysis of Dvl intracellular localisation in Xenopus chordamesoderm cells. We find that, surprisingly, accumulations previously observed at mediolateral protrusions of chordamesodermal cells are not protrusion-specific but reflect yolk-free cytoplasm and are quantitatively matched by the distribution of the cytoplasm-filling lineage marker dextran. However, separating cell cortex-associated from bulk Dvl signal reveals a statistical enrichment of Dvl in notochord-somite boundary-(NSB)-directed protrusions, which is dependent upon NSB proximity. Dvl puncta were also observed, but only upon elevated overexpression. These puncta showed no statistically significant spatial bias, in contrast to the strongly posteriorly-enriched GFP-Dvl puncta previously reported in zebrafish. We propose that Dvl distribution is more subtle and dynamic than previously appreciated and that in vertebrate mesoderm it reflects processes other than protrusion as such.


Subject(s)
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/metabolism , Mesoderm/metabolism , Phosphoproteins/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism , Xenopus/metabolism , Animals , Cell Polarity , Dishevelled Proteins , Drosophila Proteins , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Xenopus/embryology
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