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Eukaryotic Cell, December 2007, p. 2419-2428, Vol. 6, No. 12
1535-9778/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.00204-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Hidekazu Kuwayama,1,3
Masazumi Sameshima,2,4
Yoshimasa Tanaka,1
Hiromi Sesaki,5 and
Miho Iijima5*
Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan 305-8572,1 Electron Microscopy Center, The Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan 113-8613,2 Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Suita, Osaka, Japan 565-0871,3 Department of Biofunctional Science Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science, Hirosaki University, Bunkyo-cho, Hirosaki, Aomori, Japan 036-8561,4 Department of Cell Biology, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 212055
Received 11 June 2007/ Accepted 3 October 2007
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A number of diffusible molecules regulate the development of Dictyostelium, including cAMP, differentiation-inducing factor, adenosine, and ammonia (5, 47, 74, 78). Ammonia has been shown to affect many developmental events in Dictyostelium. For example, in the presence of ammonia, the production and secretion of cAMP are inhibited, resulting in the impairment of chemotaxis toward cAMP and subsequent tip formation during early development (23, 61, 77). At later stages of development, ammonia acts against differentiation-inducing factor, suppresses differentiation into prestalk cells, and promotes differentiation into prespore cells (6, 26, 64, 72). In addition, ammonia plays an important role in the choice between the formation of a migrating slug and culmination. High concentrations of ammonia keep slugs migrating and block the initiation of culmination (60). The exhaustion of the ammonia supply triggers culmination at least in part by activating protein kinase A (PKA) through the DhkC signaling pathway (30, 61, 63). In fruiting bodies, extremely high concentrations of ammonium phosphate in sori maintain spore dormancy through the activation of the sporulation-specific adenylyl cyclase ACG (8).
Ammonia is produced by protein catabolism, and ammonia levels rise during development, when most energy is generated by the degradation of protein and RNA (27, 60, 71, 76). It has been suggested that glutamine synthetases, which incorporate ammonia into glutamine, control intracellular levels of ammonia. The expression of glutamine synthetases is developmentally regulated, and their activity becomes elevated during the culmination stage (12-14, 24), suggesting a role of glutamine synthetases in culmination. Indeed, the pharmacological inhibition of glutamine synthetase blocks culmination during development (14). In addition, there are five genes, amtA, amtB, amtC, rhgA, and rhgB, which belong to the evolutionarily conserved family of ammonium transporter/methylammonium permease/rhesus protein (Amt/Mep/Rh) in the Dictyostelium genome (15). Previous studies have shown that developmental phenotypes in cells lacking AmtC can be rescued by deleting the AmtA protein (62). These studies suggest that AmtC and AmtA antagonistically regulate developmental processes and that AmtA and AmtC function in either ammonium transport or ammonium sensing (20, 37, 62). In this study, we show that AmtA regulates intracellular ammonium/ammonia levels during growth and development and is critical for the morphogenesis of multicellular aggregates and normal spore formation.
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For synchronous development, exponentially growing cells were harvested and washed three times in lower pad solution (LPS) buffer (20 mM KCl, 0.24 mM MgCl2, 40 mM K2HPO4-KH2PO4, pH 6.4) and placed on 47-mm-diameter cellulose membrane filters (Toyo Roshi Kaisha, Ltd.) at a density of 5 x 106 cells/cm2. The filters were placed on M-085 paper pads (Toyo Roshi Kaisha, Ltd.) containing LPS and housed in 6-cm-diameter petri dishes at 22°C. When NH4Cl was added, ammonia buffer A (20 mM KCl, 2.5 mM MgCl2, 40 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.3) was used instead of LPS buffer. Developmental processes were observed with an Olympus SZX12 microscope. Stalk lengths were determined using the NIH Image program (developed at the National Institutes of Health [http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image/]).
Nucleic acid analyses. Genomic DNA was extracted as described previously (33, 35). Total RNA was isolated using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen) by following the manufacturer's instructions. Poly(A)-containing RNA was purified using Oligotex-dT30 Super (JSR). RNA from prespore and prestalk cells was extracted as previously described (53, 56). Southern and Northern blot analyses were performed as previously described (57). A probe specific for amtA was prepared by random priming for a 1.1-kb EcoT22I/NotI-digested fragment of cDNA SSB490.
The amtA DNA sequence was determined by sequencing cDNA clones SSB490, SSB126, and SLB420, generated by the Japanese cDNA project (51, 67, 68), and the corresponding region of genomic DNA.
Phylogenetic analysis. A neighbor-joining tree was generated by the Clustal program (65) based on Pfam database alignment (PF00909). The Swiss-Prot/TrEMBL sequence accession numbers for the indicated proteins are as follows: D. discoideum AmtA, Q9BLG4; D. discoideum AmtB, Q9BLG3; D. discoideum AmtC, Q8MXY0; Methanobacterium thermautotrophicum MTH661, O26757 [GenBank] ; Escherichia coli AmtB, P37905 [GenBank] ; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mep1p, P40260 [GenBank] ; S. cerevisiae Mep2p, P41948 [GenBank] ; S. cerevisiae Mep3p, P53390 [GenBank] ; Caenorhabditis elegans C05E11.4, P54145 [GenBank] ; Arabidopsis thaliana AMT1;1, P54144 [GenBank] ; A. thaliana AMT1;2, Q9ZPJ8; A. thaliana AMT2;1, Q9M6N7; Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Rhp, Q94CJ2; C. elegans Rhp-1, Q9N2M5; Drosophila melanogaster Rhp, Q9V3T3; Xenopus laevis RhAG, Q9DGD8; Homo sapiens RhAG, O43514; H. sapiens RhBG, Q9H310; H. sapiens RhCG, Q9UBD6; H. sapiens RhCE, P18577 [GenBank] ; and H. sapiens RhD, Q02161. Amt alpha and beta groupings were based on previous work (39).
Gene disruption and expression.
For amtA disruption, the blasticidin resistance gene (bsr) from pBsr
Bam (1) was used as a selection marker. The amtA coding region in the cDNA clone SSB490 was amplified by PCR using primers LA-XbaI (5'-gctctagaTGTAACCAACCACCACCCCAAATCC-3') and LA-HindIII (5'-cccaagcttGGTTTGGTTTTAATGCAGGTAGTGC-3') (lowercase indicates restriction sites), and then the PCR product was ligated with a 1.3-kb XbaI/HindIII fragment of pBsr
Bam. For efficient homologous recombination, part of the 5' region of the construct was replaced by a genomic sequence containing the first intron. The sequence for displacement was amplified from genomic DNA with the primers LAP-1 (5'-AATCAAGTAGCACCAGATCCAGG-3') and LA-XbaI. The bsr gene was oriented in the same direction as the amtA gene to ensure the presence of a transcriptional terminator in the middle of the amtA coding sequence. From the resulting vector, pAMTAbsr (5.9 kb), the 2.9-kb amtA or bsr fragment was excised with SalI and NotI and used for transformation.
To express the wild-type amtA gene, a plasmid containing amtA was constructed by inserting a PCR fragment containing the complete amtA open reading frame into the Dictyostelium extrachromosomal expression vector HK12neo, a derivative of MB12neo (43).
Determinations of ammonia/ammonium. The intercellular levels of ammonia were measured as follows (2, 8). Cells were developed on nitrocellulose filters at 5 x 106 cells/cm2. Filters were placed on a paper pad containing 2 ml of KK2 buffer (20 mM KH2PO4-K2HPO4, pH 6.4) and housed in petri dishes at 22°C. Cells were then harvested in 30 ml of ice-cold KK2 containing 20 mM EDTA at different time points during development, washed, and resuspended in 1 ml of KK2 buffer. The cell suspension was homogenized with a Mini-Bead-Beater (Wakenyaku Co., Ltd.), using 0.5-mm-diameter glass beads at 5,000 rpm for 3 min. For extracellular measurements, the paper pad under the nitrocellulose filter was soaked in 20 ml of KK2 buffer for 20 min to allow the ammonia to diffuse from the pad, and the resultant solution was used as a sample of the extracellular environment of the cells. To measure ammonia in the spores and spore mass solution, cells were developed on membrane filters, and sori were collected using a glass capillary. After centrifugation at 1,400 x g for 5 min, the supernatant was used as spore mass solution. The pellet of spores was resuspended in 1 ml of KK2 and then homogenized as described above. The concentrations of ammonia/ammonium in the sample solutions were measured using a Ti-9001Ka ammonia electrode (Toko Chemical Laboratories Co., Ltd.), by following the manufacturer's instructions.
Spore viability and germination. The germination rates of spores were determined as described previously (50). Spores were collected in KK2 buffer from fruiting bodies on agar plates with a wire loop. To induce synchronous germination, 30 µl of supernatant from an overnight culture of K. pneumoniae in A medium was added to 0.3 ml of spore suspension in a siliconized 20-ml test tube (28). After being shaken at 150 rpm at 22°C for 6 h, germinated spores were counted using a hemocytometer. To determine the viability of spores, vital staining with propidium iodide (PI) was used (50). Spores were collected at 2, 4, 6, and 8 days after fruiting body formation, suspended in KK2 buffer, and stained with 20 µg/ml of PI (Sigma) for 5 min.
Glucose assay. Glucose levels were measured as described previously (34), with a minor modification. Cells were grown in shaking cultures at 22°C in HL-5 medium with maltose as a carbohydrate source. Cells were harvested, developed for 0, 6, and 12 h in shaking cultures, and collected by centrifugation. The pellets were lysed by freezing at –70°C overnight. The pellets were thawed and resuspended in distilled water at 6 x 108 cells/ml. The lysates were clarified by centrifugation at 12,000 x g for 5 min, and 80 µl of the supernatants was used to measure glucose using a Sigma glucose assay kit (catalog no. GAGO20), by following the manufacturer's instructions. The protein concentration of lysate was determined using the Bio-Rad protein assay kit (catalog no. 500-0006).
Immunoblotting. Cells were developed on agar plates, and spores were harvested. Whole-cell lysates were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and blotted on polyvinylidene difluoride membranes. Blots were immunostained with monoclonal antiactin antibody (C4; Chemicon) or monoclonal antiphosphotyrosine antibody clone PY20 (ICN), as previously described (81).
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FIG. 1. Disruption of the amtA gene. (A) Phylogenetic analysis of ammonium transporters in D. discoideum (Dd), M. thermautotrophicum (Mt), E. coli (Ec), S. cerevisiae (Sc), C. reinhardtii (Cr), C. elegans (Ce), D. melanogaster (Dm), X. laevis (Xl), H. sapiens (Hs), and A. thaliana (At). The scale indicates the number of substitutions per site. (B) Disruption of amtA. A blasticidin resistance marker (bsr cassette) replaced the second intron of the amtA gene by homologous recombination. Exons are indicated by white boxes. B, Hc, and V indicate BamHI, HincII, and EcoRV restriction sites, respectively. (C) The amtA disruption was confirmed by Southern blotting, using the probe shown in panel B. Genomic DNA isolated from wild-type and amtA– cells was analyzed after digestion with HincII or BamHI and EcoRV (B+V).
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1.5-fold increase. When we induced development by starvation, intracellular levels of ammonium/ammonia gradually decreased in wild-type cells during development. Although amtA– cells also showed a gradual decrease in ammonia/ammonium levels, intracellular levels of ammonia/ammonium in amtA– cells were much higher than those seen in wild-type cells at both the aggregation stage (12 h after starvation) and culmination stage (20 h). Increases in intracellular ammonia/ammonium levels could result from either overproduction of ammonia/ammonium or defects in its transport out of cells. Supporting the latter possibility, we found that extracellular levels of ammonium/ammonia were lower in amtA– cells (Fig. 2B). We confirmed that these phenotypes were caused by the loss of the amtA gene by expressing wild-type amtA in amtA– cells. All the phenotypes were significantly rescued by the expression of AmtA. These results clearly demonstrate that AmtA is required for normal ammonia homeostasis during growth and development.
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FIG. 2. AmtA is required for intracellular ammonia homeostasis. (A) Intracellular ammonia/ammonium levels. Cells were collected at 0, 12, and 20 h of development and homogenized, and the amounts of ammonia/ammonium were determined by an ammonia electrode. Values indicate means ± standard errors of the means (SEM) (n = 3). (B) Extracellular ammonia levels. Media were collected at the indicated time points, and the amounts of ammonia were determined as described in Materials and Methods. Values indicate means ± SEM (n = 3).
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FIG. 3. amtA– cells display the aberrant morphology of fruiting bodies. (A) Poly(A)-containing RNAs were collected at the indicated time points and analyzed by Northern blotting with amtA cDNA as a probe. Five micrograms of poly(A)-containing RNAs were loaded in each lane. (B) amtA mRNA accumulates in prespore cells. Expression in respective cell types at the slug stage. Total RNA was extracted from prespore (psp) and prestalk (pst) cells in slugs. ecmA was used as a marker for prespore cells. (C) Effects of ammonia on culmination. Cells were developed in the absence of ammonia for 14 h and then transferred onto paper pads containing the indicated concentrations of NH4Cl. Photographs were taken 10 h after transfer. Bar, 1 mm. (D) amtA– cells produce many small fruiting bodies. Wild-type cells (WT), amtA– cells, and amtA– cells expressing amtA were plated on nitrocellulose filters to induce development and observed at 24 h. Bar, 0.5 mm. (E) Quantitation of aggregate density. Cells were plated on filters at a density of 5 x 106/cm2. After 12 h, aggregates in an area of 81 mm2 were counted. Values indicate means ± standard errors of the means (SEM) (n = 3). (F) Quantitation of stalk length. Values indicate means ± SEM (n 50). (G) Wild-type and amtA– cells were developed on nonnutrient plates for the indicated times. Compared to wild-type cells, amtA– cells show smaller aggregation territory sizes and increased group breakup. Cells were plated at densities of 5 x 105/cm2 and 5 x 106/cm2. Bar, 1 mm. (H) amtA– cells show higher glucose levels than wild-type cells. Cells were developed for 0, 6, and 12 h and analyzed for glucose levels. Values indicate means ± SEM (n 5).
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amtA– cells are hypersensitive to ammonia in early morphogenesis. It has been shown that NH4Cl inhibits multiple steps in early developmental processes, including the aggregation and tip formation of aggregates (10, 23, 60). Since amtA– cells contain higher levels of ammonia/ammonium in early development than wild-type cells, we reasoned that mutant cells may be more sensitive to ammonia than wild-type cells. To test this idea, we induced development in amtA– and wild-type cells in the presence of ammonia. Cells were incubated throughout development on filter membranes containing 0, 30, or 50 mM of NH4Cl. As shown in Fig. 4A, in wild-type cells, ammonia inhibited aggregation and tip formation in a concentration-dependent manner. In the absence of NH4Cl, wild-type cells developed normally and formed fruiting bodies in 24 h after starvation. However, in the presence of 30 mM NH4Cl, wild-type cells were able to form only aggregates with pointed ends (tip formation) and did not differentiate further into fruiting bodies. In 50 mM NH4Cl, wild-type cells aggregated without tip formation. This result is not simply due to a delay in development. When we examined cells for prolonged periods of time (3 days), the cells still did not form fruiting bodies. In contrast, the mutants did not show tip formation of aggregates in 30 mM NH4Cl, although amtA– cells formed fruiting bodies in the absence of NH4Cl. Furthermore, 50 mM NH4Cl completely blocked aggregation in amtA– cells. These results show that the loss of AmtA makes cells hypersensitive to ammonia in aggregation and tip formation during development.
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FIG. 4. Effects of ammonia on tip formation, chemotaxis, and culmination. (A) Effects of ammonia on aggregation and tip formation. Wild-type and amtA– cells were placed on nitrocellulose filters and allowed to develop for 36 h in the presence of 0, 30, and 50 mM NH4Cl. Bar, 0.5 mm. (B) Effects of ammonia on chemotaxis toward cAMP. Wild-type and amtA– cells were plated on nonnutrient plates in the presence or absence of 10 µM cAMP and observed after 6 h. As indicated, plates contain 0 or 30 mM NH4Cl. We determined the original position of the edge immediately after the cells were spotted. Bar, 0.2 mm.
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AmtA is required for normal spore formation. In Dictyostelium, the spore formation process is affected by ammonia through the regulation of cAMP-dependent PKA (30, 80). In addition, extra spore solution contains high concentrations of ammonium phosphate, which has been suggested to maintain the dormancy of spores (8, 9, 70). To determine whether AmtA is involved in ammonium homeostasis in spore and extra spore solution in sori, we collected sori, separated spores from extra spore solution by centrifugation, and measured levels of ammonia/ammonium. As shown in Fig. 5A, the levels of ammonia/ammonium increased twofold in amtA– spores. Wild-type spores contained 1.50 fmol of ammonia/ammonium per cell, whereas amtA– spores contained 2.69 fmol of ammonia/ammonium per cell. In addition, ammonia levels in extra spore solution decreased twofold in the mutant cells (Fig. 5B). Therefore, our data indicate that AmtA is required for normal ammonia homeostasis in spores.
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FIG. 5. AmtA is required for ammonia homeostasis, viability, and the germination of spores. Ammonia levels in spores (A) and spore mass solution (B). Three days after fruiting body formation, spore masses were collected and spores and sorus media were separated by centrifugation. The ammonia levels of each fraction were determined by an ammonia electrode. Values are normalized to 108 spores in 10 µl sori. (C) Spores were collected 0 and 12 days after fruiting body formation was completed and stained with PI. Spores were observed by phase-contrast and fluorescence microscopy. Bar, 50 µm. (D) Quantitation of PI-positive spores. Spores were collected at the indicated periods of time after fruiting body formation and stained with PI. Spores that were stained with PI were counted. (E) Spores were collected at the indicated time points after the completion of fruiting body formation and examined for germination, as described in Materials and Methods. (F) Changes of tyrosine phosphorylation of actin with aging. Total proteins were prepared from 1-, 2-, 6-, and 10-day-old spores and immunostained with antiactin antibody and antiphosphotyrosine antibody.
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95% of wild-type spores germinated, whereas only 67% of amtA mutant spores germinated. Eight days after the completion of fruiting body formation, wild-type cells maintained a germination rate similar to that seen at day 0. In contrast, the germination rate of amtA– spores decreased as they aged. We found that only 20% of amtA– spores had germinated at 8 days. It has been shown that actins are organized into thick bundles in spores and are phosphorylated on tyrosine residues during the formation and maturation of spores (38, 59). Supporting the idea that amtA– cells are defective in normal spore formation, we found that tyrosine-phosphorylated actin levels decreased in amtA– spores (Fig. 5F). Therefore, our data indicate that AmtA is required for the formation and maintenance of viable spores. |
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Previous studies have shown that AmtA is important for the morphogenesis of fruiting bodies and for resistance to high concentrations of ammonia in culmination (62). Our study confirmed the previous findings and further identifies three additional developmental processes which involve AmtA-mediated ammonia homeostasis, including chemotaxis, tip formation, and spore formation. At the beginning of development, single cells undergo chemotaxis toward aggregation centers, which release the chemoattractant cAMP, leading to the formation of multicellular aggregates. We found that AmtA affects the sensitivity to ammonia in inhibition of chemotactic migration toward cAMP. amtA– cells fail to undergo chemotaxis in the presence of NH4Cl. Since the concentrations of NH4Cl that block chemotaxis do not inhibit the normal development of amtA– cells, it is unlikely that the chemotaxis phenotypes result simply from developmental defects. In addition, in our experiments, we examined chemotaxis toward exogenously added cAMP. Therefore, the observed chemotaxis defect is not due to the inhibition of the production and secretion of cAMP by ammonia. Rather, we suggest that ammonia directly affects signaling pathways for chemotaxis. Supporting our hypothesis, it has been shown that ammonia affects intracellular pH and thereby inhibits chemotaxis (10, 19, 69). It is possible that intracellular pH is regulated at least partially by AmtA during chemotaxis. Since the morphogenesis of aggregates involves cAMP signaling (66), the impaired chemotaxis may result in defects in tip formation in aggregates in amtA– cells. Furthermore, at the final stage of development, amtA– cells formed much smaller fruiting bodies than those of wild-type cells, even in the absence of exogenously added ammonia. Many smaller fruiting bodies may result from incomplete chemotaxis, which could produce many smaller aggregates. Alternatively, it is also possible that ammonia homeostasis directly controls the size of the fruiting bodies by affecting the differentiation of spore and stalk cells.
One of our most interesting observations is that AmtA regulates ammonia levels in spores. We found that amtA– spores in fruiting bodies contained higher levels of ammonia/ammonium but that extracellular levels were decreased. In addition, amtA– spores were severely defective in viability, and these phenotypes became more severe as spores aged. It has been shown that ammonia in sori is critical for the formation and maintenance of spores (8, 9, 30, 70, 80). Thus, our studies demonstrate that AmtA is a critical regulator for ammonia homeostasis during spore formation. It is likely that the reduced viability of amtA– spores leads to their defect in germination. Unlike with cells lacking the histidine kinase dhkB, which are defective in spore dormancy and prematurely geminate in sorus (82), we did not observe premature germination in amtA– spores; it is unlikely that amtA– cells are unable to inhibit premature germination in sorus, but rather they seem to be defective in formation of fully resistant spores. It has been suggested that the organization of the actin cytoskeleton is important for the formation and stabilization of spores (38, 58, 59). During spore formation, a large fraction of actin molecules are phosphorylated on tyrosine residues and organized into thick bundles. This process is induced under PKA activity and later mediated by the MADS box transcription factor SrfA (16-18). We found that the level of tyrosine phosphorylation of actin remains low in amtA– spores, suggesting that ammonia homeostasis might regulate spore formation and stabilization by affecting the actin organization mediated by PKA and SrfA.
Our current study and previous study have shown that the disruption of AmtA does not cause the severe defects in the culmination step of aggregates on its own (62). Wild-type and amtA– cells showed similar sensitivities to exogenously added ammonia in culmination, suggesting that other ammonium transporters regulate ammonia levels at the initiation of culmination. Supporting this idea, previous studies showed that AmtC was important for the induction of culmination and that cells lacking AmtC failed to culminate and remained as slugs (20, 37). In contrast to AmtA, AmtC is proposed to function as a sensor which monitors ammonia levels and activates intracellular signaling. Consistent with this idea, AmtC is preferentially expressed at the tip region of slugs, where the culmination signal may be generated (20). Interestingly, the disruption of amtA in the amtC null strain restored the ability of cells to differentiate to undergo the culmination stage (62). In this study, we showed that amtA functions as an ammonium transporter, although it is possible that amtA controls the slug/culmination transition as an ammonia sensor. To determine whether AmtC functions as an ammonium sensor or transporter, it would be important to determine whether intracellular levels of ammonia are also altered in amtC– cells.
Members of the Amt/Mep/Rh family are found in all domains of life and involved in a variety of biological processes. In microorganisms, ammonia is a nutrient, and most Amt/Mep/Rh proteins participate in the uptake of ammonium into cells (11, 31, 36, 42, 49). In contrast, in animals, ammonia is a waste product resulting from amino acid catabolism (29). Rh proteins have been suggested to excrete ammonia to maintain intracellular homeostasis (3, 4, 32, 48, 55, 75), although several recent studies suggest that the substrate of Rh proteins is CO2, not ammonia (41, 54). Furthermore, yeast Mep2 ammonium permease has been shown to function as a sensor of ammonia, generating a signal to regulate pseudohyphal differentiation (21, 46). Mep2 may lack the ability to transport ammonium across membranes (46). In contrast to most organisms, which carry only one type of ammonium transporter among the three subfamilies (Amt alpha, Amt beta, and Rh groups), Dictyostelium contains five ammonium transporters that belong to all three subfamilies. It would be tempting to speculate that Dictyostelium uses the different functions of ammonium transporters, such as ammonium uptake, efflux, and sensing, to control its unique development.
Research was supported by a Leukemia and Lymphoma Society fellowship (3374-05) and an American Heart Association beginning grant-in-aid (0765345U) (M.I.), an American Heart Association scientist development grant (0730247N) (H.S.), and Johns Hopkins University (M.I. and H.S.).
Published ahead of print on 19 October 2007. ![]()
Present address: University of Dundee, MSI/WTB Complex, Dow Street, Dundee DD1 5EH, United Kingdom. ![]()
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