An orderly retreat: Dedifferentiation is a regulated process

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Abstract

Differentiation is a highly regulated process whereby cells become specialized to perform specific functions and lose the ability to perform others. In contrast, the question of whether dedifferentiation is a genetically determined process, or merely an unregulated loss of the differentiated state, has not been resolved. We show here that dedifferentiation in the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum relies on a sequence of events that is independent of the original developmental state and involves the coordinated expression of a specific set of genes. A defect in one of these genes, the histidine kinase dhkA, alters the kinetics of dedifferentiation and uncouples the progression of dedifferentiation events. These observations establish dedifferentiation as a genetically determined process and suggest the existence of a developmental checkpoint that ensures a return path to the undifferentiated state.

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Katoh, M., Shaw, C., Xu, Q., Van Driessche, N., Morio, T., Kuwayama, H., … Shaulsky, G. (2004). An orderly retreat: Dedifferentiation is a regulated process. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 101(18), 7005–7010. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0306983101

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