[PDF][PDF] Temporal and spatial regulation of chemotaxis

M Iijima, YE Huang, P Devreotes - Developmental cell, 2002 - cell.com
Developmental cell, 2002cell.com
The ability to sense and respond to shallow gradients of extracellular signals is remarkably
similar in Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae and mammalian leukocytes. Chemoattractant
receptors and G proteins are fairly evenly distributed along the cell surface. Receptor
occupancy generates local excitatory and global inhibitory processes that balance to control
the chemotactic response. Uniform stimuli transiently recruit PI3Ks to, and release PTEN
from, the plasma membrane, while gradients of chemoattractant cause the two enzymes to …
Abstract
The ability to sense and respond to shallow gradients of extracellular signals is remarkably similar in Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae and mammalian leukocytes. Chemoattractant receptors and G proteins are fairly evenly distributed along the cell surface. Receptor occupancy generates local excitatory and global inhibitory processes that balance to control the chemotactic response. Uniform stimuli transiently recruit PI3Ks to, and release PTEN from, the plasma membrane, while gradients of chemoattractant cause the two enzymes to bind to the membrane at the front and back of the cell, respectively. Interference with PI3Ks alters chemotaxis, and disruption of PTEN broadens PI localization and actin polymerization in parallel. Thus, counteracting signals from the upstream elements of the pathway converge to regulate the key enzymes of PI metabolism, localize these lipids, and direct pseudopod formation.
cell.com