CSM News
Electronic Edition
Volume 6, number 6
March 16, 1996

Please submit abstracts of your papers as soon as they have been
accepted for publication by sending them to CSM-News@worms.cmb.nwu.edu.

Back issues of CSM-News, the CSM Reference database and other useful
information is available by anonymous ftp from worms.cmb.nwu.edu
[165.124.233.50], via Gopher at the same address, or by World Wide Web
at the URL "http://worms.cmb.nwu.edu/dicty.html"


===========
 Abstracts
===========

Involvement of the Vacuolar Proton-translocating ATPase in Multiple
Steps of the Endo-lysosomal System and in the Contractile Vacuole
System of Dictyostelium discoideum

Lesly A. Temesvari (1,2), Juan M. Rodriguez-Paris (1), John M. Bush
(1,2,3), Linyi Zhang (1), and James A. Cardelli (1,2)

(1) Department of Microbiology and Immunology and (2) Center for
Excellence in Cancer Research Louisiana State University Medical
Center Shreveport, LA 71130 (3) Present Address: Department of Biology
University of Arkansas Little Rock, AR 72204

Journal of Cell Science, in press.

Summary

   We have investigated the effects of Concanamycin A (CMA), a
specific inhibitor of vacuolar type H+-ATPases, on acidification and
function of the endo-lysosomal and contractile vacuole (CV) systems of
D. discoideum.  This drug inhibited acidification and increased the pH
of endo-lysosomal vesicles both in vivo and in vitro in a dose
dependent manner.  CMA treatment also inhibited endocytosis and
exocytosis of fluid phase, and phagocytosis of latex beads.  This
report also confirms our previous conclusions (Cardelli et al., 1988
J.  Biol. Chem. 264, 3454) that maintenance of acidic pH in lumenal
compartments is required for efficient processing and targeting of a
lysosomal enzyme, a-mannosidase.  CMA treatment compromised the
function of the contractile vacuole complex as amoebae exposed to a
hypo-osmotic environment in the presence of CMA, swelled rapidly and
ruptured.  Fluorescence microscopy revealed that CMA treatment induced
gross morphological changes in D. discoideum cells, characterized by
the formation of large intracellular vacuoles containing fluid phase.
The reticular membranes of the CV system were also no longer as
apparent in drug treated cells.  Finally, this is the first report
describing cells that can adapt in the presence of CMA; in nutrient
medium, D. discoideum overcame the effects of CMA after one hour of
drug treatment even in the absence of protein synthesis.  Upon
adaptation to CMA, normal sized endo-lysosomal vesicles reappeared,
endo-lysosomal pH decreased, and the rate of endocytosis, exocytosis
and phagocytosis returned to normal.  This study demonstrates that the
V-H+-ATPase plays an important role in maintaining the integrity and
function of the endo-lysosomal and CV systems and that D. discoideum
can compensate for the loss of a functional V-H+-ATPase.

------------------------------------------------------------------


Structures of Diphosphoinositol Pentakisphosphate and
Bisdiphosphoinositol Tetrakisphosphate from Dictyostelium resolved by
NMR Analysis

Tim Laussmann, Reint Eujen, C. Michael Weisshuhn, Ulrich Thiel
and Guenter Vogel*

Wachbereich 9 - Chemie, Bergische Universitaet GHS Wuppertal, Gaussstrasse 20
D-42097 Wuppertal, FRG

Biochem.J., in press

Summary

   Diphospho-myo-inositol phosphates (PP-InsP5 and bis-PP-InsP4) were
isolated from Dictyostelium in order to clarify the precise positional
isomerism by two dimensional 1H-31P NMR analysis. The diphosphorylated
inositol phosphates are 4-PP-Ins(1,2,3,5,6)P5 and
4,5-bis-PP-Ins(1,2,3,6)P4 or their corresponding enantiomers. The
vicinal arrangement of the diphospho groups with its steric and
electrostatic constraints possibly qualifies bis-PP-InsP4 as a
metabolite with high phosphate group transfer potential in
phosphotransferase reactions.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

How Slime Molds Evade Nematodes

Richard H. Kessin, Gregg G. Gundersen, Victor Zaydfudim, Mark Grimson, and
R. Lawrence Blanton

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, in press. 

Abstract:

   We have found a complex predator-prey association between the
social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum and the free soil living
nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.  C. elegans feeds on the amoebae and
multiplies indefinitely when amoebae are the sole food source. In an
environment created from soil, D. discoideum grows and develops, but
not in the presence of C. elegans. During development, C. elegans
feeds on amoebae until they aggregate and synthesize an extracellular
matrix called the slime sheath. After t he sheath forms, the aggregate
and slug are protected. Adult nematodes ingest Dictyostelium spores,
which pass through the gut of the worm without loss of structure and
remain viable. Nematodes kill the amoebae, but disperse the
spores. The sheath that is constructed when the amoebae aggregate and
the spore coats of the individual cells may protect against this
predator. We also show that individual amoebae secrete compounds that
repel nematodes.
 
---------------------------------------------------------------------

A LYSOSOMAL CYSTEINE PROTEINASE FROM DICTYOSTELIUM DISCOIDEUM CONTAINS
N-ACETYLGLUCOSAMINE-1-PHOSPHATE BOUND TO SERINE, BUT NOT
MANNOSE-6-PHOSPHATE ON N-LINKED OLIGOSACCHARIDES.

Darshini P. Mehta, Mie Ichikawa, Paramahans V. Salimath,
James R. Etchison, Richard Haak, Adriana Manzi# and Hudson H. Freeze

J. Biol. Chem., in press

Summary

   Previous studies showed that vegetative Dictyostelium discoideum
cells make a lysosomal proteinase, proteinase-1, that contains
multiple GlcNAc-a-1-P residues in phosphodiester linkage to serine.
In order to have a better insight to this protein and its unusual
sugar modification, we purified proteinase-1 and examined its
carbohydrate components by direct chemical analysis, enzymatic
degradations, lectin affinity chromatography and carbohydrate specific
antibodies.  In contrast to earlier reports, we found that
proteinase-1 contains 7.5 mole of Fuc, 8 mole of Man, 2 mole of Xyl
and 30 moleGlcNAc per calculated mole of protein, but no Man-6-P
residues were found.  The protein binds to Concanavalin A and Wheat
Germ Agglutinin lectin affinity columns, and PNGase-F digestion
released most of the mannose and xylose, but only a small portion of
the GlcNAc.  b-elimination under reducing conditions released only
GlcNAc-a-1-P as analyzed by fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry,
but there was no evidence for the release of disaccharides or of
fucitol.  Rabbit antiserum and monoclonal antibodies prepared against
proteinase-1 recognize GlcNAc-a-1-P residues in immunoblots and are
specifically competed by UDP-GlcNAc or GlcNAc-a-1-P.  Similar blots
with other monoclonal antibodies showed the presence of
mannose-6-sulfate on N-linked sugar chains, and a-fucose residues on
the protein.  Thus, proteinase-1 has at least two types of
modifications: GlcNAc-a-1-P-Ser, which we call phosphoglycosylation,
and N-linked oligosaccharides.  This is the first purified lysosomal
enzyme in Dictyostelium that does not contain Man-6-P residues.  The
GlcNAc-a-1-P specific antibodies also recognize a group of
developmentally regulated proteins, especially enriched in vegetative
cells.  Some of them are also lysosomal cysteine proteinases, and all
bind to the GlcNAc-a-1-P specific monoclonal antibody, but not to the
mammalian CI-Man-6-P receptor.  Conversely, lysosomal enzymes that
have Man-6-P do not bind to the GlcNAc-a-1-P specific antibody.  An
exception to this is b-N-acetylglucosaminidase where 15% of the
activity binds to this antibody.  Thus, there appear to be two sets of
lysosomal enzymes with distinctly different post-translational
modifications.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

[End CSM News, volume 6, number 6]