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1.
How vesicular transport participates in neurite outgrowth is still poorly understood. Neurite outgrowth is not sensitive to tetanus neurotoxin thus does not involve synaptobrevin-mediated vesicular transport to the plasma membrane of neurons. Tetanus neurotoxin-insensitive vesicle-associated membrane protein (TI-VAMP) is a vesicle-SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion protein [NSF] attachment protein [SNAP] receptor), involved in transport to the apical plasma membrane in epithelial cells, a tetanus neurotoxin-resistant pathway. Here we show that TI-VAMP is essential for vesicular transport-mediating neurite outgrowth in staurosporine-differentiated PC12 cells. The NH(2)-terminal domain, which precedes the SNARE motif of TI-VAMP, inhibits the association of TI-VAMP with synaptosome-associated protein of 25 kD (SNAP25). Expression of this domain inhibits neurite outgrowth as potently as Botulinum neurotoxin E, which cleaves SNAP25. In contrast, expression of the NH(2)-terminal deletion mutant of TI-VAMP increases SNARE complex formation and strongly stimulates neurite outgrowth. These results provide the first functional evidence for the role of TI-VAMP in neurite outgrowth and point to its NH(2)-terminal domain as a key regulator in this process.  相似文献   

2.
GSK-3β signaling is involved in regulation of both neuronal and glial cell functions, and interference of the signaling affects central nervous system (CNS) development and regeneration. Thus, GSK-3β was proposed to be an important therapeutic target for promoting functional recovery of adult CNS injuries. To further clarify the regulatory function of the kinase on the CNS regeneration, we characterized gecko GSK-3β and determined the effects of GSK-3β inactivation on the neuronal and glial cell lines, as well as on the gecko tail (including spinal cord) regeneration. Gecko GSK-3β shares 91.7-96.7% identity with those of other vertebrates, and presented higher expression abundance in brain and spinal cord. The kinase strongly colocalized with the oligodendrocytes while less colocalized with neurons in the spinal cord. Phosphorylated GSK-3β (pGSK-3β) levels decreased gradually during the normally regenerating spinal cord ranging from L13 to the 6th caudal vertebra. Lithium injection increased the pGSK-3β levels of the corresponding spinal cord segments, and in vitro experiments on neurons and oligodendrocyte cell line revealed that the elevation of pGSK-3β promoted elongation of neurites and oligodendrocyte processes. In the normally regenerate tails, pGSK-3β kept stable in 2 weeks, whereas decreased at 4 weeks. Injection of lithium led to the elevation of pGSK-3β levels time-dependently, however destructed the regeneration of the tail including spinal cord. Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) staining demonstrated that inactivation of GSK-3β decreased the proliferation of blastemal cells. Our results suggested that species-specific regulation of GSK-3β was indispensable for the complete regeneration of CNS.  相似文献   

3.
Regulation of growth cone extension by SNARE proteins.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Recent studies have suggested that the soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attached protein (SNAP) receptor (SNARE)-mediated membrane fusion system is involved in vesicle fusion with the surface plasma membrane, which leads to neurite elongation. There have been several reports analyzing the effects of neurite outgrowth by inhibition of SNAREs. We studied this mechanism by overexpressing GFP-fusion SNAREs including VAMP-2, SNAP-25A, and syntaxin1A in PC12 cells to investigate the role of SNAREs in neurite outgrowth. When overexpressed in PC12 cells, VAMP-2 promoted neurite elongation, whereas SNAP-25A stimulated neurite sprouting. On the other hand, overexpression of syntaxin1A neither promoted nor inhibited neurite outgrowth. Thus, VAMP-2 and SNAP-25A play different roles in neurite elongation and sprouting.  相似文献   

4.
Spinal cord injury causes sensory loss below the level of lesion. Synaptosomal-associated protein 25 (SNAP25) is a t-SNARE protein essential for exocytosis and neurotransmitter release, but its role in sensory functional recovery has not been determined. The aim of the present study is therefore to investigate whether SNAP25 can promote sensory recovery. By 2D proteomics, we found a downregulation of SNAP25 and then constructed two lentiviral vectors, Lv-exSNAP25 and Lv-shSNAP25, which allows efficient and stable RNAi-mediated silencing of endogenous SNAP25. Overexpression of SNAP25 enhanced neurite outgrowth in vitro and behavior response to thermal and mechanical stimuli in vivo, while the silencing of SNAP25 had the opposite effect. These results suggest that SNAP25 plays a crucial role in sensory functional recovery following spinal cord injury (SCI). Our study therefore provides a novel target for the management of SCI for sensory dysfunction.  相似文献   

5.
6.
In larval lamprey, descending brain neurons, which regenerate their axons following spinal cord injury, were isolated and examined in cell culture to identify some of the factors that regulate neurite outgrowth. Focal application of 5 mM or 25 mM L-glutamate to single growth cones inhibited outgrowth of the treated neurite, but other neurites from the same neuron were not inhibited, an effect that has not been well studied for neurons in other systems. Glutamate-induced inhibition of neurite outgrowth was abolished by 10 mM kynurenic acid. Application of high potassium media to growth cones inhibited neurite outgrowth, an effect that was blocked by 2 mM cobalt or 100 microM cadmium, suggesting that calcium influx via voltage-gated channels contributes to glutamate-induced regulation of neurite outgrowth. Application of glutamate to growth cones in the presence of 2 microM omega-conotoxin MVIIC (CTX) still inhibited neurite outgrowth, while CTX blocked high potassium-induced inhibition of neurite outgrowth. Thus, CTX blocked virtually all of the calcium influx resulting from depolarization. To our knowledge, this is the first direct demonstration that calcium influx via ligand-gated ion channels can contribute to regulation of neurite outgrowth. Finally, focal application of glutamate to the cell bodies of descending brain neurons inhibited outgrowth of multiple neurites from the same neuron, and this is the first demonstration that multiple neurites can be regulated in this fashion. Signaling mechanisms involving intracellular calcium, similar to those shown here, may be important for regulating axonal regeneration following spinal cord injury in the lamprey.  相似文献   

7.
The Sec1/Munc18 (SM) proteins constitute a conserved family with essential functions in SNARE‐mediated membrane fusion. Recently, a new protein–protein interaction site in Sec1p, designated the groove, was proposed. Here, we show that a sec1 groove mutant yeast strain, sec1(w24), displays temperature‐sensitive growth and secretion defects. The yeast Sec1p and mammalian Munc18‐1 grooves were shown to play an important role in the interaction with the SNAREs Sec9p and SNAP‐25b, respectively. Incubation of SNAP‐25b with the Munc18‐1 groove mutant resulted in a lag in the kinetics of SNARE complex assembly in vitro when compared with wild‐type Munc18‐1. The SNARE regulator SRO7 was identified as a multicopy suppressor of sec1(w24) groove mutant and an intact Sec1p groove was required for the plasma membrane targeting of Sro7p–SNARE complexes. Simultaneous inactivation of Sec1p groove and SRO7 resulted in reduced levels of exocytic SNARE complexes. Our results identify the groove as a conserved interaction surface in SM proteins. The results indicate that this structural element is important for interactions with Sec9p/SNAP‐25 and participates, in concert with Sro7p, in the initial steps of SNARE complex assembly.   相似文献   

8.
Lipid raft association of SNARE proteins regulates exocytosis in PC12 cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
SNAP25 and SNAP23 are plasma membrane SNARE proteins essential for regulated exocytosis in diverse cell types. Several recent studies have shown that these proteins are partly localized in lipid rafts, domains of the plasma membrane enriched in sphingolipids, and cholesterol. Here, we have employed cysteine mutants of SNAP25/SNAP23, which have modified affinities for raft domains, to examine whether raft association of these proteins is important for the regulation of exocytosis. PC12 cells were engineered that express the light chain of botulinum neurotoxin; in these cells all of the SNAP25 was cleaved to a lower molecular weight form, and regulated exocytosis was essentially absent. Exocytosis was rescued by expressing toxin-resistant SNAP25 or wild-type SNAP23, which is naturally toxin-resistant. Remarkably, a mutant SNAP25 protein with an increased affinity for rafts displayed a reduced ability to support exocytosis, whereas SNAP23 mutants with a decreased affinity for rafts displayed an enhancement of exocytosis when compared with wild-type SNAP23. The effects of the mutant proteins on exocytosis were dependent upon the integrity of the plasma membrane and lipid rafts. These results provide the first direct evidence that rafts regulate SNARE function and exocytosis and identify the central cysteine-rich region of SNAP25/23 as an important regulatory domain.  相似文献   

9.
Outgrowing neurites in Xenopus embryos were labeled with horseradish peroxidase which had been injected into a single blastomere at the 32-cell stage and had been inherited by all the descendants, including neurons. Neurite outgrowth was traced from labeled trigeminal ganglion cells and most or all types of neurons present in the spinal cord at embryonic stages 20-30: primary motoneurons, commissural, dorsal longitudinal, ventral longitudinal, and Rohon-Beard neurons. All types of nerve fibers grew by the most direct pathway, apparently without errors of initial outgrowth, pathway selection, or target selection. An initial transient phase of outgrowth of filopodial processes from neuronal cell bodies and shafts of short neurites was observed which disappeared after further elongation of the neurites. The first pioneer fibers grew out from all types in a 2-hr period, from stage 20 to 22, and these fibers arrived at the targets within 3.5 hr after initial outgrowth. Additional fibers grew later in contact with the pioneers to form fascicles. Nerve fibers elongated without branching until they neared or contacted their targets. The rate of elongation at 20 degrees C was 30-75 micron/hr. The rapid, unbranched, error-free initial outgrowth and elongation of neurites to their targets is discussed in relation to theories of development of nerve pathways.  相似文献   

10.
Exocytosis is one of the most crucial and ubiquitous processes in all of biology. This event is mediated by the formation of SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor) complexes, ternary assemblies of syntaxin, SNAP23/SNAP25 (synaptosomal-associated protein of 23 or 25 kDa), and synaptobrevin. The exocytotic process can be further regulated by complexin, which interacts with the SNARE complex. Complexin is involved in a Ca2+-triggered exocytotic process. In eukaryotic cells, multiple isoforms of SNARE proteins are expressed and are involved in distinct types of exocytosis. To understand the underlying biochemical mechanism of various exocytotic processes mediated by different SNARE protein isoforms, we systematically analyzed the interactions among syntaxin, SNAP23/SNAP25, synaptobrevin, and complexin by employing a newly developed yeast four-hybrid interaction assay. The efficiency of SNARE complex formation and the specificity of complexin binding are regulated by the different SNARE protein isoforms. Therefore, various types of exocytosis, occurring on different time scales with different efficiencies, can be explained by the involved SNARE complexes composed of different combinations of SNARE protein isoforms.  相似文献   

11.
The fusion of intracellular membranes is driven by the formation of a highly stable four-helix bundle of SNARE proteins embedded in the vesicle and target membranes. N-Ethylmaleimide sensitive factor recycles SNAREs after fusion by binding to the SNARE complex through an adaptor protein, αSNAP, and using the energy of ATP hydrolysis to disassemble the complex. Although only a single molecule of αSNAP binds to a soluble form of the SNARE complex, we find that three molecules of αSNAP are used for SNARE complex disassembly. We describe an engineered αSNAP trimer that supports more efficient SNARE complex disassembly than monomeric αSNAP. Using the trimerized αSNAP, we find that N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor hydrolyzes 10 ATP molecules on average to disassemble a single SNARE complex.  相似文献   

12.
Uncontrolled, excessive inflammation contributes to the secondary tissue damage of traumatic spinal cord, and HMGB1 is highlighted for initiation of a vicious self-propagating inflammatory circle by release from necrotic cells or immune cells. Several regenerative-competent vertebrates have evolved to circumvent the second damages during the spontaneous spinal cord regeneration with an unknown HMGB1 regulatory mechanism. By genomic surveys, we have revealed that two paralogs of HMGB1 are broadly retained from fish in the phylogeny. However, their spatial-temporal expression and effects, as shown in lowest amniote gecko, were tightly controlled in order that limited inflammation was produced in spontaneous regeneration. Two paralogs from gecko HMGB1 (gHMGB1) yielded distinct injury and infectious responses, with gHMGB1b significantly up-regulated in the injured cord. The intracellular gHMGB1b induced less release of inflammatory cytokines than gHMGB1a in macrophages, and the effects could be shifted by exchanging one amino acid in the inflammatory domain. Both intracellular proteins were able to mediate neuronal programmed apoptosis, which has been indicated to produce negligible inflammatory responses. In vivo studies demonstrated that the extracellular proteins could not trigger a cascade of the inflammatory cytokines in the injured spinal cord. Signal transduction analysis found that gHMGB1 proteins could not bind with cell surface receptors TLR2 and TLR4 to activate inflammatory signaling pathway. However, they were able to interact with the receptor for advanced glycation end products to potentiate oligodendrocyte migration by activation of both NFκB and Rac1/Cdc42 signaling. Our results reveal that HMGB1 does not mediate the inflammatory response in spontaneous spinal cord regeneration, but it promotes CNS regeneration.  相似文献   

13.
Soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion protein attachment protein receptor (SNARE) proteins mediate cellular membrane fusion events and provide a level of specificity to donor-acceptor membrane interactions. However, the trafficking pathways by which individual SNARE proteins are targeted to specific membrane compartments are not well understood. In neuroendocrine cells, synaptosome-associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP25) is localized to the plasma membrane where it functions in regulated secretory vesicle exocytosis, but it is also found on intracellular membranes. We identified a dynamic recycling pathway for SNAP25 in PC12 cells through which plasma membrane SNAP25 recycles in approximately 3 h. Approximately 20% of the SNAP25 resides in a perinuclear recycling endosome-trans-Golgi network (TGN) compartment from which it recycles back to the plasma membrane. SNAP25 internalization occurs by constitutive, dynamin-independent endocytosis that is distinct from the dynamin-dependent endocytosis that retrieves secretory vesicle constituents after exocytosis. Endocytosis of SNAP25 is regulated by ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF)6 (through phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate synthesis) and is dependent upon F-actin. SNAP25 endosomes, which exclude the plasma membrane SNARE syntaxin 1A, merge with those derived from clathrin-dependent endocytosis containing endosomal syntaxin 13. Our results characterize a robust ARF6-dependent internalization mechanism that maintains an intracellular pool of SNAP25, which is compatible with possible intracellular roles for SNAP25 in neuroendocrine cells.  相似文献   

14.
Corticospinal axon outgrowth in vivo and the ability to sprout or regenerate after injury decline with age. This developmental decline in growth potential has been correlated with an increase in inhibitory myelin‐associated proteins in older spinal cord. However, previous results have shown that sprouting of corticospinal fibers after contralateral lesions begins to diminish prior to myelination, suggesting that a decrease in growth promoting and/or an increase in inhibitory molecules in spinal gray matter may also regulate corticospinal axon outgrowth. To address this possibility, we carried out in vitro experiments to measure neurite outgrowth from explants of 1‐day‐old hamster forelimb sensorimotor cortex that were plated onto membrane carpets or membrane stripe assays prepared from white or gray matter of 1‐to 22‐day‐old cervical spinal cord. On uniform carpets and in the stripe assays cortical neurites grew robustly on young but not older membranes from both white and gray matter. Mixtures of membranes from 1‐ and 15‐day spinal cord inhibited neurite outgrowth, suggesting that the presence of inhibitory molecules in the 15‐day cord overwhelmed permissive or growth promoting molecules in membranes from 1‐day cord. Video microscopic observations of growth cone behaviors on membrane stripe assays transferred to glass coverslips supported this view. Cortical growth cones repeatedly collapsed at borders between permissive substrates (laminin or young membrane stripes) and nonpermissive substrates (older membrane stripes). Growth cones either turned away from the older membranes or reduced their growth rates. These results suggest that molecules in both the gray and white matter of the developing spinal cord can inhibit cortical neurite outgrowth. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 39: 393–406, 1999  相似文献   

15.
Traumatic spinal cord injury is a common and severe complication after an accident. As we all know that neurite outgrowth of neurons is difficult after a spinal cord injury. Endosome system is associated with cargoes transportation and contributes in promoting the neuronal capability for neurite outgrowth. EH domain-containing protein 1 (EHD1) transports proteins through the endosome system, especially in the recycling endosomes and regulating the neurite outgrowth. In mammalian cells, the involvement of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in endosomal sorting has been well established. Two RING fingers and a DRIL (double RING finger-linked) 1 (Triad1) plays an important role in membrane trafficking and its mutant results in the wrong accumulation of receptors in endosomes and plasma membrane. In this current study, we reasonably integrated the results of the above research and investigated the regulating function of Triad1 to EHD1 following the spinal cord injury. We characterized the upregulated expression and distribution of Triad1 and EHD1 in the neurons after SCI and declared the interaction between Triad1 with EHD1 both in vitro and in vivo. Triad1 regulated the interaction between itself and the full-length or EH domain of EHD1, which influenced the neurite outgrowth of PC12 cells. Our data delineate a novel interaction between Triad1 and EHD1 that may contribute to the regulation of neurite outgrowth for neurons after the spinal cord injury.  相似文献   

16.
The plasma membrane soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) proteins syntaxin and synaptosome-associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP25) and the vesicle SNARE protein vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP) are essential for a late Ca(2+)-dependent step in regulated exocytosis, but their precise roles and regulation by Ca(2+) are poorly understood. Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) E, a protease that cleaves SNAP25 at Arg(180)-Ile(181), completely inhibits this late step in PC12 cell membranes, whereas BoNT A, which cleaves SNAP25 at Gln(197)-Arg(198), is only partially inhibitory. The difference in toxin effectiveness was found to result from a reversal of BoNT A but not BoNT E inhibition by elevated Ca(2+) concentrations. BoNT A treatment essentially increased the Ca(2+) concentration required to activate exocytosis, which suggested a role for the C terminus of SNAP25 in the Ca(2+) regulation of exocytosis. Synaptotagmin, a proposed Ca(2+) sensor for exocytosis, was found to bind SNAP25 in a Ca(2+)-stimulated manner. Ca(2+)-dependent binding was abolished by BoNT E treatment, whereas BoNT A treatment increased the Ca(2+) concentration required for binding. The C terminus of SNAP25 was also essential for Ca(2+)-dependent synaptotagmin binding to SNAP25. syntaxin and SNAP25.syntaxin.VAMP SNARE complexes. These results clarify classical observations on the Ca(2+) reversal of BoNT A inhibition of neurosecretion, and they suggest that an essential role for the C terminus of SNAP25 in regulated exocytosis is to mediate Ca(2+)-dependent interactions between synaptotagmin and SNARE protein complexes.  相似文献   

17.
SNARE complexes form between the synaptic vesicle protein synaptobrevin and the plasma membrane proteins syntaxin and SNAP25 to drive membrane fusion. A cytosolic protein, complexin (Cpx), binds to the SNARE bundle, and its accessory helix (AH) functions to clamp synaptic vesicle fusion. We performed molecular-dynamics simulations of the SNARE/Cpx complex and discovered that at equilibrium the Cpx AH forms tight links with both synaptobrevin and SNAP25. To simulate the effect of electrostatic repulsion between vesicle and membrane on the SNARE complex, we calculated the electrostatic force and performed simulations with an external force applied to synaptobrevin. We found that the partially unzipped state of the SNARE bundle can be stabilized by interactions with the Cpx AH, suggesting a simple mechanistic explanation for the role of Cpx in fusion clamping. To test this model, we performed experimental and computational characterizations of the syx3-69Drosophila mutant, which has a point mutation in syntaxin that causes increased spontaneous fusion. We found that this mutation disrupts the interaction of the Cpx AH with synaptobrevin, partially imitating the cpx null phenotype. Our results support a model in which the Cpx AH clamps fusion by binding to the synaptobrevin C-terminus, thus preventing full SNARE zippering.  相似文献   

18.
SNARE complexes form between the synaptic vesicle protein synaptobrevin and the plasma membrane proteins syntaxin and SNAP25 to drive membrane fusion. A cytosolic protein, complexin (Cpx), binds to the SNARE bundle, and its accessory helix (AH) functions to clamp synaptic vesicle fusion. We performed molecular-dynamics simulations of the SNARE/Cpx complex and discovered that at equilibrium the Cpx AH forms tight links with both synaptobrevin and SNAP25. To simulate the effect of electrostatic repulsion between vesicle and membrane on the SNARE complex, we calculated the electrostatic force and performed simulations with an external force applied to synaptobrevin. We found that the partially unzipped state of the SNARE bundle can be stabilized by interactions with the Cpx AH, suggesting a simple mechanistic explanation for the role of Cpx in fusion clamping. To test this model, we performed experimental and computational characterizations of the syx3-69Drosophila mutant, which has a point mutation in syntaxin that causes increased spontaneous fusion. We found that this mutation disrupts the interaction of the Cpx AH with synaptobrevin, partially imitating the cpx null phenotype. Our results support a model in which the Cpx AH clamps fusion by binding to the synaptobrevin C-terminus, thus preventing full SNARE zippering.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Corticospinal axon outgrowth in vivo and the ability to sprout or regenerate after injury decline with age. This developmental decline in growth potential has been correlated with an increase in inhibitory myelin-associated proteins in older spinal cord. However, previous results have shown that sprouting of corticospinal fibers after contralateral lesions begins to diminish prior to myelination, suggesting that a decrease in growth promoting and/or an increase in inhibitory molecules in spinal gray matter may also regulate corticospinal axon outgrowth. To address this possibility, we carried out in vitro experiments to measure neurite outgrowth from explants of 1-day-old hamster forelimb sensorimotor cortex that were plated onto membrane carpets or membrane stripe assays prepared from white or gray matter of 1-to 22-day-old cervical spinal cord. On uniform carpets and in the stripe assays cortical neurites grew robustly on young but not older membranes from both white and gray matter. Mixtures of membranes from 1- and 15-day spinal cord inhibited neurite outgrowth, suggesting that the presence of inhibitory molecules in the 15-day cord overwhelmed permissive or growth promoting molecules in membranes from 1-day cord. Video microscopic observations of growth cone behaviors on membrane stripe assays transferred to glass coverslips supported this view. Cortical growth cones repeatedly collapsed at borders between permissive substrates (laminin or young membrane stripes) and nonpermissive substrates (older membrane stripes). Growth cones either turned away from the older membranes or reduced their growth rates. These results suggest that molecules in both the gray and white matter of the developing spinal cord can inhibit cortical neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

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