Why does slug length correlate with speed during Dictyostelium discoideum? J. Biosci.,
Transcription
Why does slug length correlate with speed during Dictyostelium discoideum? J. Biosci.,
J. Biosci., Vol. 20, Number 1, January 1995, pp 1–6. © Printed in India. Why does slug length correlate with speed during migration in Dictyostelium discoideum? J Τ BONNER Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. Princeton University, Princeton. New Jersey 08544, USA MS received 15 July 1994; revised 30 September 1994 Abstract. Taking advantage of the fact that static electricity in plastic Petri dishes will produce very long, thin migrating slugs of Dictyostelium discoideum, it was shown that these slugs moved particularly rapidly. This is consistent with the demonstration of Inouye and Takeuchi that speed varies with length for slugs migrating on agar. Based on these observations it is suggested that slug speed is controlled by both the resistance at the tip and some factor that correlates With slug size, such as the concentration of endogenously produced ammonia. Keywords. Slime mould; Dictyostelium; migration speed. 1. Introduction It was first observed by Francis (1959) and later put on a firm basis by Inouye and Takeuchi (1979) that the speed of a migrating slug of Dictyostelium discoideum correlates significantly with its length, and not its volume or surface area. Ever since the advent of plastic Petri dishes many workers have observed that occasionally slugs become very thin and long, and move straight up to reach the underside of the lid. As will be shown here, this phenomenon is caused by static electricity, and these especially long and thin slugs follow the length ∝-speed rule, and from this fact it is possible to draw some inferences as to how migration speed is governed in cellular slime moulds. 2. Methods The amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum NC-4 were grown in plastic Petri dishes (100 × 15 mm) on 2%, non-nutrient agar at room temperature. Loopfuls of Escherichia coli B/r were placed at three points on the agar surface roughly 1 cm from the edge and each was inoculated with D. discoideum spores. The meniscus of the agar on the side of the dish was cut out near each of the points of inoculation to make viewing from the side possible. When migrating slugs appeared the lids of the Petri dishes were rubbed with either paper tissues, or a piece of synthetic velvet. That this does generate a considerable amount of static electricity is made evident by the fact that if there are fruiting bodies on the plate, the spore masses will fly lose from their stalks and splash on the underside of the Petri dish lid. The charged spores are nolt held in by a sheath, as has been clearly demonstrated recently by Sameshima (1993), and are pulled loose by the electrostatic forces. 1 2 J T Bonner To obtain a side view of the rising slugs they were looked at from above, through a prism complex put at the edge of the Petri dish nearest the slug. Both the dish and the prism rested on a sheet of plastic to avoid grounding by the metal of the microscope. This arrangement was placed under a microscope with a 50 mm lens and recorded with a time lapse video recorder (Panasonic video camera, WW-1850; recorder, AG-6720A). The speeds of the migrating slugs were measured over a period of 10 to 30 min; ten slugs were measured in all. To examine the shape of the cells within slugs, they were knocked over, put onto a microscope slide, and immediately submerged in a few drops of macerating fluid ( 1: 1: 13 glycerol ; glacial acetic acid : water). This treatment partially separates the cells and each retains its original shape. 3. Results 3.1 Description of slugs If one takes two Petri dishes containing migrating slugs and rubs the upper surface of the lid of one and not the other, the one in which static electricity has been generated will, after an interval of time, have more slugs pointing straight upwards towards the lid. Not all the slugs will show this response, but only those young ones that happen to have their tips raised. An attempt was made to see if one could distinguish prestalk and prespore zones in these slugs by staining them with the vital dye neutral red, but they appeared uniformly stained, which is characteristic of younger slugs (Bonner et al 1990). It proved to be difficult to obtain good side views of these rising slugs for they are very delicate and are affected by the slightest change in their environment, including anything that might change the static electricity, distribution on the Petri dish. Even the atmospheric conditions affected the experiments; cool, and especially dry days, were clearly desirable. The slugs attracted to the Petri dish lid by static electricity are not only thin and long, but their posterior end rises on their condensed slime sheath so that they are held up by the finest stiff, straight pedestal—as thin as a small piece of spider's silk (figure 1a). To illustrate the fact that this bit of raised slime sheath is strong, not infrequently the slug will not reach the lid, but change to the fruiting, or culmination mode, in mid air. The slug's tip will reverse its forward motion to form the beginning of a small fruiting body perched on the top of the slime sheath thread, and then will proceed to culminate, the basal disc of the stalk beginning in mid air (figure 1b). The slugs used for the culmination data are not included in the migration data because it was not possible to measure both for one slug—the technical problems were too great. When the long thin slugs were placed in a macerating solution it could be seen that the orientation of their cells was the same as one finds in normal slugs (Smith 1983; Feit 1994). The cells in and near the tip are isodiametric, while the cells in the bulk of the slug are more or less elliptical in shape and oriented parallel to the main axis of the slug. 3.2 Speed ∝—length As a background to this study, Inouye and Takeuchi (1979) have measured the Why does slug length correlate with Dlctyostelium discoideum 3 Figure 1. (a) A photograph take from the video screen of a slug rising to the lid charged with static electricity. (The slug is approximately 2 mm long). (b) A similar slug that has changed into the fruiting mode in mid air and has formed a fruiting body standing on a thread of congealed slime sheath. (The arrow indicates the junction between the basal disc and the rigid slime sheath column. Note that the stalk is unusually thick, an anomaly that occurs occasionally under normal conditions. Both photographs are at the same magnification). length and the speed of a number of slugs, and I have plotted their data as solid dots on a log-log scale (figure 2). The data obtained here for slugs attracted by static electricity have been superimposed on the graph as open circles. For comparison I have measured the length of a number of slugs, and then later measured the rate at which they moved upward as they fruited. Clearly these culmination speeds also vary with the length of the slugs, and although culmination is a much slower process than migration, the slope of its length-speed relation is parallel to that of migration (figure 2). 4. Discussion There are some differences between slugs which lie flat on the agar and those rise from the agar due to static electricity, but the interesting thing is that despite these differences the speed-length relationship holds. These observations led to the obvious hypothesis that speed is severely affected by the resistance at the tip of the migrating slug. The static electricity reduces that resistance by attracting the slug tip, with the result that the slugs become longer and thinner, and move more rapidly (no slug on plastic or glass will be as long as one under the influence of static electricity). It has been known for many years (Bonner 1994), and observed by numerous workers, that when the tip of the slug rises into the air it becomes relatively elongate and moves faster, and when it drops back onto the agar, it slows and becomes broader. Francis (1959) showed that at low temperatures slugs 4 J Τ Bonner Figure 2. A log-log plot showing the relation of speed to slug length. The solid dots are the data of Inouye and Takeuchi (1979) for slugs migrating on agar. The open circles are the long, thin slugs under the influence of static electricity. The open squares are for the speeds of culmination whose prior slug lengths had been measured while they were migrating on agar. not only moved more slowly, but became short and thick. All of these facts lead to the conclusion that one of the reasons slug length correlates with its speed is that a reduction of resistance at the tip produces both a thinning of the slug and more rapid speed. One question that must be asked here is why is culmination in D. discoideum a slower process than migration. Before making any hypothetical suggestion as to why this might be, let me remind the reader that while this is true for this species (Bonner and Eldredge 1945, and this study), Cox et al (1988) showed that the rate of culmination is the same regardless of size in Polysphondylium pallidum. Polysphondylium differs from Dictyostelium in that it does not have prespore and prestalk zones—all the cells in the 'slug' appear to be similar and as the cell mass Why does slug length correlate with DIctyostelium discoideum 5 rises, the stalk is continuously produced at the tip, and at the posterior of the mass groups of cells are pinched off to form a whorl at quite regular intervals. On the other hand in Dictyostelium, as it rises the posterior prespore cells turn into mature spores fairly early in culmination. For this reason it is generally thought that the motive force for the culmination movement comes entirely from the anterior prestalk cells. Therefore, one of the reasons culmination might be slower than migration is that during culmination the relative length of the prestalk zone is much shorter than that of a migrating slug. This cannot be the only reason, for if one takes into account the culminating prestalk zone length, it still moves more slowly than the estimated speed of migrating slugs of similar length. Perhaps the speed is also reduced during culmination because the process of forming the stalk at the tip in itself provides extra resistance to the upward movement. (These explanations still leave the problem of Polysphondylium where size does not seem to affect speed, a matter that is clearly in need of further investigation). The isodiametric shape of the cells in the tip region compared to the cells in the rest of the slug, even in long thin slugs, could reflect this tip resistance. Furthermore, it is well known that during culmination, where, as we have seen, there is an even greater reduction in speed, the prestalk cells are flattened and have their long axes perpendicular to the direction of movement. The other known factors that affect speed are size, age, and the concentration of ammonia (review: Bonner 1994). The reasons for the decline with age, which was established by Inouye and Takeuchi (1979), could be a simple depletion of energy substrates within the cells. In the case of NH 3 it has long been known that it is given off by the slugs, and that the speed of slug movement is accelerated by an appropriate increase in NH3 concentration. By far the most significant factor is size. Previously we made the suggestion that in larger slugs the concentration of internally generated NH3 would be higher than in small slugs, because of the increase volume to surface ratio, which would mean that the NH 3 diffuses away less effectively in large slugs (Bonner et al 1989). However this argument would not apply for long, thin slugs, where the escape of NH3 would be facilitated. A good hypothesis to account for this apparent contradiction would be that the speed of slugs is limited by both the internal concentration of NH 3 dictated by the surface/volume ratio, and by the resistance at the tip. Acknowledgements I would like to thank Jordan Poler for his helpful advice on how to deal with static electricity, and for the time he took to devise and construct a special Petri dish with which he could induce static electricity with high voltages. I also thank the following individuals for helpful comments and criticisms of earlier versions of the paper: Ε C Cox, Κ Inouye, V Nanjundiah, and Ε Palsson. References Bonner J Τ 1994 The migration stage of Dictyostelium: behaviour without muscles or nerves; FEMS Microbiol. Lett. (in press) Bonner J Τ and Eldredge D Jr 1945 A note on the rate of morphogenetic movement in the slime mold 6 J T Bonner Dictyostelium discoideum; Growth 9 287–297 Bonner J T, Har D and Suthers Η Β 1989 Ammonia and thermotaxis: further evidence for a central role of ammonia in the directed cell mass movements of Dictyostelium discoideum; Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86 2733–2736 Bonner J T, Feit I N, Selassie Α Κ and Suthers Η Β 1990 Timing of the formation of the prestalk and prespore zones in Dictyostelium discoideum; Dev. Genet. 11 439-441 Cox Ε C, Spiegel F W, Byrne G, McNally J W and Eisenbud L 1988 Spatial patterns in the fruiting bodies of the cellular slime mould Polysphondylium pallidum; Differentiation 38 73-81 Feit Ι Ν 1994 Cell prints on the surface of the slug of Dictyostelium discoideum; a Nessler-positive matrix substance; Dev. Biol. (in press) Francis D F 1959 M.S. Thesis, University of Wisconsin, Wisconsin, USA Inouye Κ and Takeuchi I 1979 Analytical studies on migrating, movement of the pseudoplasmodium of Dictyostelium discoideum; Protoplasma 99 289-304 Sameshima Μ 1993 Disappearance of the surface sheath from Dictyostelium discoideum sorus during late culmination; Cytologia 58 361-366 Smith Β Ν 1983 Senior Thesis, Princeton University, Princeton, USA