TRANSDUCTION OF THE A SIGNAL IN MYXOCOCCUS DEVELOPMENT
Project Number5R01GM047444-11
Contact PI/Project LeaderKAPLAN, HEIDI B
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HLTH SCI CTR HOUSTON
Description
Abstract Text
Myxococcus xanthus represents an excellent model system to address
fundamental questions of how cell-cell signaling pathways control multicellular
development. These questions are relevant to all normal embryonic and adult
cells that transduce signals to coordinate processes such as growth and
differentiation, as well as to cells that are defective in signaling networks,
such as cancer cells.
Progression through early multicellular development requires that M. xanthus
cells sense and respond to a high cell density and nutrient limitation. Two
sensitive sensing networks monitor these extracellular signals and converge at
a critical checkpoint early in M. xanthus development. This check -point can be
monitored by expression of a specific gene, spi. The long-term goals of this
research are to determine: i) How do the cells sense and transduce the
cell-density signal? ii) How are the cell-density- and nutrient-sensing
pathways integrated? iii) What is the connection between the change in gene
expression and the complex behavioral response of multicellular fruiting body
formation?
The identification and characterization of three critical regulators of spi
expression, SasS, SasR, and SasN has begun to address these questions. Using
classical and molecular genetics combined with protein biochemistry, they have
generated a hypothesis for the mechanism by which these proteins integrate both
the cell-density signal (extracellular A signal) and the starvation signal,
creating the circuitry that controls the developmental expression of the
responsive spi gene.
To test this hypothesis, they plan to: i) analyze the SasS/SasR/SasN-dependent
integration of cell density and starvation signals during early M. xanthus
development, ii) generate an in vitro transcription system to test the activity
of the SasS/SasR pathway, iii) analyze the stimulation of the SasS/SasR pathway
by alterations in cell-surface integrity, and iv) investigate
SasS/SasR-independent A signal transduction pathways. Their ultimate goal is to
reconstitute the complete signaling pathway as proof of its function.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01GM047444-11
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