ABSTRACT
Adenosine 3’,5’-cyclic phosphorothioate (cAMP-S) is a cyclic AMP (cAMP) analogue which is only slowly hydrolysed by phosphodiesterases of Dictyostelium discoideum. The affinity of cAMP-S to cAMP receptors at the cell surface is only one order of magnitude lower than that of cAMP. cAMP-S can replace cAMP as a stimulant with respect to all receptor-mediated responses tested, including chemotaxis and the induction of cAMP pulses.
cAMP-S does not affect growth of D. discoideum but it blocks cell aggregation at a uniform concentration of 5 × 10−7 M in agar plate cultures of strain NC-4 as well as its axenically growing derivative, Ax-2. Another wild-type strain of D. discoideum, v-12, is able to aggregate on agar plates supplemented with 1 mM cAMP-S. The development of Polysphondylium pallidum and P. violaceum is also highly cAMP-S resistant.
In Ax-2 both differentiation from the growth phase to the aggregation-competent stage and chemotaxis are cAMP-S sensitive, whereas in v-12 only chemotaxis is inhibited, v-12 can still form streams of cohering cells and fruiting bodies when chemotaxis is inhibited by cAMP-S.
Whereas cAMP induces differentiation into stalk cells at concentrations of 10−3 or 10 −4 M, cAMP-S has the same effect in strain v-12 at the much lower concentration of 10−8 M.