In this paper, we show that the G(alpha) subunit G(alpha)4 couples to pterin receptors and identifies a signaling pathway that is essential for multicellular development in Dictyostelium. G(alpha)4 is developmentally regulated, is essential for proper morphogenesis and spore production, and functions cell nonautonomously. We show that G(alpha)4 is coupled to receptors (alpha FAR) that activate chemotaxis and adenylyl and guanylyl cyclases in response to folate during the early stages of development and to a late class of folate receptors (beta FAR) that have different specificities for pterins. G(alpha)4 is preferentially expressed in cells randomly distributed within the aggregate that are a component of the anterior-like cell population, and it is not detectably expressed in prespore cells. Our results suggest that an endogenous factor, possibly a pterin, produced during multicellular development is a requisite signal for multicellular development, acting through G(alpha)4. We propose that the G(alpha)4-expressing cells function as a regulatory cell type controlling prespore cell fate, possibly in response to an endogenous pterin. Our results indicate that G(alpha)4 and G(alpha)2 have parallel functions in mediating cellular responses to folate (pterins) and cAMP, respectively.