AI Article Synopsis

  • RblA, a retinoblastoma-like protein in Dictyostelium discoideum, influences cell differentiation during development but its role in regulating cell proliferation is unclear.
  • rblA⁻ cells show increased proliferation in shaking cultures but lower spore viability after starvation, indicating RblA affects cell proliferation rather than growth.
  • AprA inhibits the proliferation of wild-type cells but not rblA⁻ cells, while CfaD inhibits both; together, these factors suggest RblA’s role in regulating cell density through an autocrine signaling mechanism that may be relevant for organ and tumor size control.

Article Abstract

Retinoblastoma-like proteins regulate cell differentiation and inhibit cell proliferation. The Dictyostelium discoideum retinoblastoma orthologue RblA affects the differentiation of cells during multicellular development, but it is unclear whether RblA has a significant effect on Dictyostelium cell proliferation, which is inhibited by the secreted proteins AprA and CfaD. We found that rblA⁻ cells in shaking culture proliferate to a higher density, die faster after reaching stationary density, and, after starvation, have a lower spore viability than wild-type cells, possibly because in shaking culture, rblA⁻ cells have both increased cytokinesis and lower extracellular accumulation of CfaD. However, rblA⁻ cells have abnormally slow proliferation on bacterial lawns. Recombinant AprA inhibits the proliferation of wild-type cells but not that of rblA⁻ cells, whereas CfaD inhibits the proliferation of both wild-type cells and rblA⁻ cells. Similar to aprA⁻ cells, rblA⁻ cells have a normal mass and protein accumulation rate on a per-nucleus basis, indicating that RblA affects cell proliferation but not cell growth. AprA also functions as a chemorepellent, and RblA is required for proper AprA chemorepellent activity despite the fact that RblA does not affect cell speed. Together, our data indicate that an autocrine proliferation-inhibiting factor acts through RblA to regulate cell density in Dictyostelium, suggesting that such factors may signal through retinoblastoma-like proteins to control the sizes of structures such as developing organs or tumors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3957591PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/EC.00306-13DOI Listing

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