Extracellular adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) serves multiple roles in Dictyostelium development, acting as a chemoattractant, a cell-cell signaling molecule, and an inducer of differentiation. The Dictyostelium G-protein alpha subunit G alpha 2 appears to be the major transducer linking the surface cAMP receptor to these intracellular responses. On stimulation of cells with cAMP, G alpha 2 is phosphorylated on one or more serine residues, resulting in an alteration of its electrophoretic mobility. Phosphorylation of G alpha 2 is triggered by increased occupancy of the surface cAMP receptor and is rapid and transient, coinciding with the time course of activation of physiological responses.
Starving Dictyostelium discoideum cells monitor the local density of other starving cells by simultaneously secreting and sensing CMF. CMF regulates signal transduction through the chemoattractant cAMP receptor, cARl. cARl activates a heterotrimeric G protein by stimulating Goc2 to release GDP and bind GTP. We show here that the rate of cAMP-stimulated GTP hydrolysis in membranes from cells exposed to CMF is roughly 4 times slower than in membranes from untreated cells, even though the rate of GTP binding is the same. This hydrolysis is abolished in cells lacking Goc2. Our data thus suggest that CMF regulates cAMP signal transduction in part by prolonging the lifetime of the Ga2-GTP complex.
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