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Dive into the research topics where Danny Fuller is active.

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Featured researches published by Danny Fuller.


Cell | 2007

The Golgi-Associated Protein GRASP Is Required for Unconventional Protein Secretion during Development

Matthew A. Kinseth; Christophe Anjard; Danny Fuller; Gianni Guizzunti; William F. Loomis; Vivek Malhotra

During Dictyostelium development, prespore cells secrete acyl-CoA binding protein (AcbA). Upon release, AcbA is processed to generate a peptide called spore differentiation factor-2 (SDF-2), which triggers terminal differentiation of spore cells. We have found that cells lacking Golgi reassembly stacking protein (GRASP), a protein attached peripherally to the cytoplasmic surface of Golgi membranes, fail to secrete AcbA and, thus, produce inviable spores. Surprisingly, AcbA lacks a signal sequence and is not secreted via the conventional secretory pathway (endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi-cell surface). GRASP is not required for conventional protein secretion, growth, and the viability of vegetative cells. Our findings reveal a physiological role of GRASP and provide a means to understand unconventional secretion and its role in development.


Genome Biology | 2010

Conserved developmental transcriptomes in evolutionarily divergent species

Anup Parikh; Edward Roshan Miranda; Mariko Katoh-Kurasawa; Danny Fuller; Gregor Rot; Lan Zagar; Tomaz Curk; Richard Sucgang; Rui Chen; Blaz Zupan; William F. Loomis; Adam Kuspa; Gad Shaulsky

BackgroundEvolutionarily divergent organisms often share developmental anatomies despite vast differences between their genome sequences. The social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum and Dictyostelium purpureum have similar developmental morphologies although their genomes are as divergent as those of man and jawed fish.ResultsHere we show that the anatomical similarities are accompanied by extensive transcriptome conservation. Using RNA sequencing we compared the abundance and developmental regulation of all the transcripts in the two species. In both species, most genes are developmentally regulated and the greatest expression changes occur during the transition from unicellularity to multicellularity. The developmental regulation of transcription is highly conserved between orthologs in the two species. In addition to timing of expression, the level of mRNA production is also conserved between orthologs and is consistent with the intuitive notion that transcript abundance correlates with the amount of protein required. Furthermore, the conservation of transcriptomes extends to cell-type specific expression.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that developmental programs are remarkably conserved at the transcriptome level, considering the great evolutionary distance between the genomes. Moreover, this transcriptional conservation may be responsible for the similar developmental anatomies of Dictyostelium discoideum and Dictyostelium purpureum.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2003

Changing Patterns of Gene Expression in Dictyostelium Prestalk Cell Subtypes Recognized by In Situ Hybridization with Genes from Microarray Analyses

Mineko Maeda; Haruyo Sakamoto; Negin Iranfar; Danny Fuller; Toshinari Maruo; Satoshi Ogihara; Takahiro Morio; Hideko Urushihara; Yoshimasa Tanaka; William F. Loomis

ABSTRACT We used microarrays carrying most of the genes that are developmentally regulated in Dictyostelium to discover those that are preferentially expressed in prestalk cells. Prestalk cells are localized at the front of slugs and play crucial roles in morphogenesis and slug migration. Using whole-mount in situ hybridization, we were able to verify 104 prestalk genes. Three of these were found to be expressed only in cells at the very front of slugs, the PstA cell type. Another 10 genes were found to be expressed in the small number of cells that form a central core at the anterior, the PstAB cell type. The rest of the prestalk-specific genes are expressed in PstO cells, which are found immediately posterior to PstA cells but anterior to 80% of the slug that consists of prespore cells. Half of these are also expressed in PstA cells. At later stages of development, the patterns of expression of a considerable number of these prestalk genes changes significantly, allowing us to further subdivide them. Some are expressed at much higher levels during culmination, while others are repressed. These results demonstrate the extremely dynamic nature of cell-type-specific expression in Dictyostelium and further define the changing physiology of the cell types. One of the signals that affect gene expression in PstO cells is the hexaphenone DIF-1. We found that expression of about half of the PstO-specific genes were affected in a mutant that is unable to synthesize DIF-1, while the rest appeared to be DIF independent. These results indicate that differentiation of some aspects of PstO cells can occur in the absence of DIF-1.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2003

Genome-Wide Expression Analyses of Gene Regulation during Early Development of Dictyostelium discoideum

Negin Iranfar; Danny Fuller; William F. Loomis

ABSTRACT Using genome-wide microarrays, we recognized 172 genes that are highly expressed at one stage or another during multicellular development of Dictyostelium discoideum. When developed in shaken suspension, 125 of these genes were expressed if the cells were treated with cyclic AMP (cAMP) pulses at 6-min intervals between 2 and 6 h of development followed by high levels of exogenous cAMP. In the absence of cAMP treatment, only three genes, carA, gbaB, and pdsA, were consistently expressed. Surprisingly, 14 other genes were induced by cAMP treatment of mutant cells lacking the activatable adenylyl cyclase, ACA. However, these genes were not cAMP induced if both of the developmental adenylyl cyclases, ACA and ACR, were disrupted, showing that they depend on an internal source of cAMP. Constitutive activity of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase PKA was found to bypass the requirement of these genes for adenylyl cyclase and cAMP pulses, demonstrating the critical role of PKA in transducing the cAMP signal to early gene expression. In the absence of constitutive PKA activity, expression of later genes was strictly dependent on ACA in pulsed cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

External and internal constraints on eukaryotic chemotaxis

Danny Fuller; Wen Chen; Micha Adler; Alex Groisman; Herbert Levine; Wouter-Jan Rappel; William F. Loomis

Chemotaxis, the chemically guided movement of cells, plays an important role in several biological processes including cancer, wound healing, and embryogenesis. Chemotacting cells are able to sense shallow chemical gradients where the concentration of chemoattractant differs by only a few percent from one side of the cell to the other, over a wide range of local concentrations. Exactly what limits the chemotactic ability of these cells is presently unclear. Here we determine the chemotactic response of Dictyostelium cells to exponential gradients of varying steepness and local concentration of the chemoattractant cAMP. We find that the cells are sensitive to the steepness of the gradient as well as to the local concentration. Using information theory techniques, we derive a formula for the mutual information between the input gradient and the spatial distribution of bound receptors and also compute the mutual information between the input gradient and the motility direction in the experiments. A comparison between these quantities reveals that for shallow gradients, in which the concentration difference between the back and the front of a 10-μm-diameter cell is <5%, and for small local concentrations (<10 nM) the intracellular information loss is insignificant. Thus, external fluctuations due to the finite number of receptors dominate and limit the chemotactic response. For steeper gradients and higher local concentrations, the intracellular information processing is suboptimal and results in a smaller mutual information between the input gradient and the motility direction than would have been predicted from the ligand–receptor binding process.


Developmental Biology | 1987

Surface glycoprotein, gp24, involved in early adhesion of Dictyostelium discoideum

David A. Knecht; Danny Fuller; William F. Loomis

A membrane glycoprotein of 24,000 Da (gp24) was purified from developed cells of Dictyostelium discoideum and shown to neutralize a crude antiserum (R695) that blocks EDTA-sensitive cell-cell adhesion during the early developmental stages of this organism. Purified gp24 was used to raise rabbit polyclonal antibodies and mouse monoclonal antibodies. Rabbit antiserum R851 was shown to be highly specific to gp24 by both Western analysis and immunoprecipitation. IgG of R851 is able to block adhesion of dissociated cells swirled in suspension. Adhesion of wild-type cells is blocked by R851 antibodies during the first 8 hr of development but not thereafter when other adhesion mechanisms come into play. The glycoprotein gp80 plays an essential role in the second adhesion system that appears during the aggregation stage of D. discoideum. By adding both anti-gp24 and anti-gp80 antibodies, adhesion of aggregation stage cells could be blocked. Late in development a third adhesion mechanism appears that is not blocked by either antibodies to gp24 or gp80 or both antibodies together. Western analysis and immunoprecipitation with monoclonal antibody mLJ11, specific for gp24, indicated that gp24 is absent in cells growing exponentially on bacteria but is rapidly synthesized and accumulated following the initiation of development. Synthesis of gp24 is maximal during the first 4 hr of development and then continues at a reduced rate throughout the remainder of development. The coordinate appearance of gp24 and EDTA-sensitive cell-cell adhesion as well as the ability of this glycoprotein to neutralize the adhesion blocking activity of R695 and R851 antibodies indicates that it plays a role in early cell-cell adhesion.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2004

RasC plays a role in transduction of temporal gradient information in the cyclic-AMP wave of Dictyostelium discoideum.

Deborah Wessels; Rebecca Brincks; Spencer Kuhl; Vesna Stepanovic; Karla J. Daniels; Gerald Weeks; Chinten James Lim; George B. Spiegelman; Danny Fuller; Negin Iranfar; William F. Loomis; David R. Soll

ABSTRACT To define the role that RasC plays in motility and chemotaxis, the behavior of a rasC null mutant, rasC−, in buffer and in response to the individual spatial, temporal, and concentration components of a natural cyclic AMP (cAMP) wave was analyzed by using computer-assisted two-dimensional and three-dimensional motion analysis systems. These quantitative studies revealed that rasC− cells translocate at the same velocity and exhibit chemotaxis up spatial gradients of cAMP with the same efficiency as control cells. However, rasC− cells exhibit defects in maintaining anterior-posterior polarity along the substratum and a single anterior pseudopod when translocating in buffer in the absence of an attractant. rasC− cells also exhibit defects in their responses to both the increasing and decreasing temporal gradients of cAMP in the front and the back of a wave. These defects result in the inability of rasC− cells to exhibit chemotaxis in a natural wave of cAMP. The inability to respond normally to temporal gradients of cAMP results in defects in the organization of the cytoskeleton, most notably in the failure of both F actin and myosin II to exit the cortex in response to the decreasing temporal gradient of cAMP in the back of the wave. While the behavioral defect in the front of the wave is similar to that of the myoA−/myoF− myosin I double mutant, the behavioral and cytoskeletal defects in the back of the wave are similar to those of the S13A myosin II regulatory light-chain phosphorylation mutant. Expression array data support the premise that the behavioral defects exhibited by the rasC− mutant are the immediate result of the absence of RasC function.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2004

Control of Cell Type Proportioning in Dictyostelium discoideum by Differentiation-Inducing Factor as Determined by In Situ Hybridization

Toshinari Maruo; Haruyo Sakamoto; Negin Iranfar; Danny Fuller; Takahiro Morio; Hideko Urushihara; Yoshimasa Tanaka; Mineko Maeda; William F. Loomis

ABSTRACT We have determined the proportions of the prespore and prestalk regions in Dictyostelium discoideum slugs by in situ hybridization with a large number of prespore- and prestalk-specific genes. Microarrays were used to discover genes expressed in a cell type-specific manner. Fifty-four prespore-specific genes were verified by in situ hybridization, including 18 that had been previously shown to be cell type specific. The 36 new genes more than doubles the number of available prespore markers. At the slug stage, the prespore genes hybridized to cells uniformly in the posterior 80% of wild-type slugs but hybridized to the posterior 90% of slugs lacking the secreted alkylphenone differentiation-inducing factor 1 (DIF-1). There was a compensatory twofold decrease in prestalk cells in DIF-less slugs. Removal of prespore cells resulted in cell type conversion in both wild-type and DIF-less anterior fragments. Thus, DIF-1 appears to act in concert with other processes to establish cell type proportions.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Innate non-specific cell substratum adhesion.

William F. Loomis; Danny Fuller; Edgar Gutierrez; Alex Groisman; Wouter-Jan Rappel

Adhesion of motile cells to solid surfaces is necessary to transmit forces required for propulsion. Unlike mammalian cells, Dictyostelium cells do not make integrin mediated focal adhesions. Nevertheless, they can move rapidly on both hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces. We have found that adhesion to such surfaces can be inhibited by addition of sugars or amino acids to the buffer. Treating whole cells with αlpha-mannosidase to cleave surface oligosaccharides also reduces adhesion. The results indicate that adhesion of these cells is mediated by van der Waals attraction of their surface glycoproteins to the underlying substratum. Since glycoproteins are prevalent components of the surface of most cells, innate adhesion may be a common cellular property that has been overlooked.


BMC Genomics | 2015

Leaps and lulls in the developmental transcriptome of Dictyostelium discoideum.

Rafael D. Rosengarten; Balaji Santhanam; Danny Fuller; Mariko Katoh-Kurasawa; William F. Loomis; Blaz Zupan; Gad Shaulsky

BackgroundDevelopment of the soil amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum is triggered by starvation. When placed on a solid substrate, the starving solitary amoebae cease growth, communicate via extracellular cAMP, aggregate by tens of thousands and develop into multicellular organisms. Early phases of the developmental program are often studied in cells starved in suspension while cAMP is provided exogenously. Previous studies revealed massive shifts in the transcriptome under both developmental conditions and a close relationship between gene expression and morphogenesis, but were limited by the sampling frequency and the resolution of the methods.ResultsHere, we combine the superior depth and specificity of RNA-seq-based analysis of mRNA abundance with high frequency sampling during filter development and cAMP pulsing in suspension. We found that the developmental transcriptome exhibits mostly gradual changes interspersed by a few instances of large shifts. For each time point we treated the entire transcriptome as single phenotype, and were able to characterize development as groups of similar time points separated by gaps. The grouped time points represented gradual changes in mRNA abundance, or molecular phenotype, and the gaps represented times during which many genes are differentially expressed rapidly, and thus the phenotype changes dramatically. Comparing developmental experiments revealed that gene expression in filter developed cells lagged behind those treated with exogenous cAMP in suspension. The high sampling frequency revealed many genes whose regulation is reproducibly more complex than indicated by previous studies. Gene Ontology enrichment analysis suggested that the transition to multicellularity coincided with rapid accumulation of transcripts associated with DNA processes and mitosis. Later development included the up-regulation of organic signaling molecules and co-factor biosynthesis. Our analysis also demonstrated a high level of synchrony among the developing structures throughout development.ConclusionsOur data describe D. discoideum development as a series of coordinated cellular and multicellular activities. Coordination occurred within fields of aggregating cells and among multicellular bodies, such as mounds or migratory slugs that experience both cell-cell contact and various soluble signaling regimes. These time courses, sampled at the highest temporal resolution to date in this system, provide a comprehensive resource for studies of developmental gene expression.

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Negin Iranfar

University of California

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Gad Shaulsky

Baylor College of Medicine

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Adam Kuspa

Baylor College of Medicine

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Alex Groisman

University of California

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Bo Hu

University of California

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David A. Knecht

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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