SIGNALING IN MYXOBACTERIA
Kaiser, Dale; Kaiser, Dale; Departments of Biochemistry and Developmental Biology, Stanford University , Stanford, California 94305 ; email: kaiser@cmgm.stanford.edu
Журнал:
Annual Review of Microbiology
Дата:
2004
Аннотация:
▪ Abstract Myxobacteria use soluble and cell-contact signals during their starvation-induced formation of fruiting bodies. These signals coordinate developmental gene expression with the cell movements that build fruiting bodies. Early in development, the quorum-sensing A-signal in Myxococcus xanthus helps to assess starvation and induce the first stage of aggregation. Later, the morphogenetic C-signal helps to pattern cell movement and shape the fruiting body. C-signal is a 17-kDa cell surface protein that signals by contact between the ends of two cells. The number of C-signal molecules per cell rises 100-fold from the beginning of fruiting body development to the end, when spores are formed. Traveling waves, streams, and sporulation have increasing thresholds for C-signal activity, and this progression ensures that spores form inside fruiting bodies.
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