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Petra Fey <[log in to unmask]>
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Fri, 22 Jun 2012 22:25:45 +0000
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dictyNews
Electronic Edition
Volume 38, number 15
June 22, 2012

Please submit abstracts of your papers as soon as they have been
accepted for publication by sending them to [log in to unmask]
or by using the form at
http://dictybase.org/db/cgi-bin/dictyBase/abstract_submit.

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


A matricellular protein and EGF-like repeat signalling in the social 
amoebozoan Dictyostelium discoideum

Robert J. Huber and Danton H. O’Day

Department of Cell and Systems Biology, University of Toronto, 
25 Harbord Street, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 3G5
Department of Biology, University of Toronto Mississauga, 3359 
Mississauga Road North, Mississauga, ON, Canada L5L 1C6


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences, In press

Matricellular proteins interact with the extracellular matrix (ECM) and 
modulate cellular processes by binding to cell surface receptors and 
initiating intracellular signal transduction. Their association with the 
ECM and the ability of some members of this protein family to regulate 
cell motility have opened up new avenues of research to investigate 
their functions in normal and diseased cells. In this review, we 
summarize the research on CyrA, an ECM calmodulin-binding protein 
in Dictyostelium. CyrA is proteolytically cleaved into smaller EGF-like 
(EGFL) repeat-containing cleavage products during development. 
The first EGFL repeat of CyrA binds to the cell surface and activates 
a novel signalling pathway that modulates cell motility in this model 
organism. The similarity of CyrA to the most well characterized 
matricellular proteins in mammals allows it to be designated as 
the first matricellular protein identified in Dictyostelium. 


Submitted by Robert Huber [[log in to unmask]]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


On-Chip Open Microfluidic Devices for Chemotaxis Studies. 

Gus A. Wright, Lino Costa, Alexander Terekhov, Dawit Jowhar, 
William Hofmeister, and Christopher Janetopoulos. 


Microscopy and Microanalysis, in press

Microfluidic devices can provide unique control over both the 
chemoattractant gradient and the migration environment of the 
cells. Our work incorporates laser-machined micro and nanofluidic 
channels into bulk fused silica and cover slip-sized silica wafers. 
We have designed “open” chemotaxis devices that produce 
passive chemoattractant gradients without an external micropipette 
system.  Since the migration area is unobstructed, cells can be 
easily loaded and strategically placed into the devices with a 
standard micropipette. The reusable monolithic glass devices have 
integral ports that can generate multiple gradients in a single 
experiment. We also used cover slip microfluidics for chemotaxis 
assays. Passive gradients elicited from these cover slips could be 
readily adapted for high throughput chemotaxis assays. We have 
also demonstrated for the first time that cells can be recruited into 
cover slip ports eliciting passive chemoattractant gradients. This 
proves, in principle, that intravital cover slip configurations could 
deliver controlled amounts of drugs, chemicals or pathogens as well 
as recruit cells for proteomic or histological analysis in living animals 
while under microscopic observation. Intravital cover slip fluidics will 
create a new paradigm for in vivo observation of biological processes.


Submitted by Gus Wright [[log in to unmask]]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


SCAR knockouts in Dictyostelium:  WASP assumes SCAR’s functions 
and upstream regulators.

Douwe M. Veltman, Jason S. King, Laura M. Machesky and 
Robert H. Insall*


J. Cell Biology, in press

The Arp2/3 complex activator SCAR/WAVE controls actin polymerization 
in pseudopods, while WASP assembles actin at clathrin coated pits.  
Unexpectedly, Dictyostelium SCAR knockouts can still spread, migrate 
and chemotax using pseudopods driven by the Arp2/3 complex. In the
absence of SCAR, some WASP relocates from the coated pits to the 
leading edge, where it behaves with similar dynamics to normal SCAR, 
forming split pseudopods and travelling waves. Pseudopods colocalize 
with active Rac, whether driven by WASP or SCAR, though Rac is 
activated to a higher level in SCAR mutants.  Members of the SCAR 
regulatory complex like PIR121 are not required for WASP regulation.  
We thus show that WASP is unexpectedly able to respond to all core 
upstream signals, and regulators that couple through the other members 
of SCAR’s regulatory complex are not essential for pseudopod formation.  
We conclude that WASP and SCAR can regulate pseudopod actin using 
similar mechanisms.


Submitted by Robert Insall [[log in to unmask]]]
==============================================================
[End dictyNews, volume 38, number 15]

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