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1.
In chromaffin cells, exocytosis of single granules and properties of the fusion pore--the first connection between vesicular lumen and extracellular space --can be studied by cell-attached patch amperometry, which couples patch-clamp capacitance measurements with simultaneous amperometric recordings of transmitter release. Here we have studied exocytosis of single chromaffin granules and endocytosis of single vesicles in cell-free inside-out membrane patches by patch capacitance measurements and patch amperometry. We excised patches from chromaffin cells by using methods developed for studying properties of single ion channels. With low calcium concentrations in the pipette and bath, the patches showed no spontaneous exocytosis, but exocytosis could be induced in some patches by applying calcium to the cytoplasmic side of the patch. Exocytosis was also stimulated by calcium entry through the patch membrane. Initial conductances of the fusion pore were undistinguishable in cell-attached and excised patch recordings, but the subsequent pore expansion was slower in excised patches. The properties of exocytotic fusion pores in chromaffin cells are very similar to those observed in mast cells and granulocytes. Excised patches provide a tool with which to study the mechanisms of fusion pore formation and endocytosis in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
A significant number of exocytosis events recorded with amperometry demonstrate a prespike feature termed a "foot" and this foot has been correlated with messengers released via a transitory fusion pore before full exocytosis. We have compared amperometric spikes with a foot with spikes without a foot at chromaffin cells and found that the probability of detecting a distinct foot event is correlated to the amount of catecholamine released. The mean charge of the spikes with a foot was found to be twice that of the spikes without a foot, and the frequency of spikes displaying a foot was zero for small spikes increasing to approximately 50% for large spikes. It is hypothesized that in chromaffin cells, where the dense core is believed to nearly fill the vesicle, the expanding core is a controlling factor in opening the fusion pore, that prefusion of two smaller vesicles leads to excess membrane, and that this slows pore expansion leading to an increased observation of events with a foot. Clearly, the physicochemical properties of vesicles are key factors in the control of the dynamics of release through the fusion pore and the high and variable frequency of this release makes it highly significant.  相似文献   

3.
Membrane fusion during exocytosis and throughout the cell is believed to involve members of the SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion protein attachment protein receptors) family of proteins. The assembly of these proteins into a four-helix bundle may be part of the driving force for bilayer fusion. Regulated exocytosis in neurons and related cell types is specialized to be fast and Ca(2+)-dependent suggesting the involvement of other regulatory proteins specific for regulated exocytosis. Among these are the complexins, two closely related proteins that bind only to the assembled SNARE complex. We have investigated the function of complexin by analysis of single vesicle release events in adrenal chromaffin cells using carbon fiber amperometry. These cells express complexin II, and overexpression of this protein modified the kinetics of vesicle release events so that their time course was shortened. This effect depended on complexin interaction with the SNARE complex as introduction of a mutation of Arg-59, a residue that interacts with synaptobrevin in the SNARE complex, abolished its effects. The data are consistent with a function for complexin in stabilizing an intermediate of the SNARE complex to allow kiss-and-run recycling of the exocytosed vesicle.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Release of charged neurotransmitter molecules through a narrow fusion pore requires charge compensation by other ions. It has been proposed that this may occur by ion flow from the cytosol through channels in the vesicle membrane, which would generate a net outward current. This hypothesis was tested in chromaffin cells using cell-attached patch amperometry that simultaneously measured catecholamine release from single vesicles and ionic current across the patch membrane. No detectable current was associated with catecholamine release indicating that <2% of cations, if any, enter the vesicle through its membrane. Instead, we show that flux of catecholamines through the fusion pore, measured as an amperometric foot signal, decreases when the extracellular cation concentration is reduced. The results reveal that the rate of transmitter release through the fusion pore is coupled to net Na+ influx through the fusion pore, as predicted by electrodiffusion theory applied to fusion-pore permeation, and suggest a prefusion rather than postfusion role for vesicular cation channels.  相似文献   

6.
Membrane fusion underlies multiple processes, including exocytosis of hormones and neurotransmitters. Membrane fusion starts with the formation of a narrow fusion pore. Radial expansion of this pore completes the process and allows fast release of secretory compounds, but this step remains poorly understood. Here we show that inhibiting the expression of the small GTPase Cdc42 or preventing its activation with a dominant negative Cdc42 construct in human neuroendocrine cells impaired the release process by compromising fusion pore enlargement. Consequently the mode of vesicle exocytosis was shifted from full-collapse fusion to kiss-and-run. Remarkably, Cdc42-knockdown cells showed reduced membrane tension, and the artificial increase of membrane tension restored fusion pore enlargement. Moreover, inhibiting the motor protein myosin II by blebbistatin decreased membrane tension, as well as fusion pore dilation. We conclude that membrane tension is the driving force for fusion pore dilation and that Cdc42 is a key regulator of this force.  相似文献   

7.
The fungal metabolite, brefeldin A (BFA), is known to inhibit guanine nucleotide exchange on the ADP-ribosylating factors that are involved in vesicle membrane trafficking. Here, we investigated the action of BFA on Ca2+-regulated exocytosis in single rat adrenal chromaffin cells. Incubation of chromaffin cells with BFA (1 or 10 microM) for 2 h effectively disrupted the Golgi membranes but did not affect the pattern of catecholamine release triggered by high extracellular K+, which was monitored with carbon fiber amperometry along with cytosolic Ca2+ measurement. The BFA treatment, however, increased the mean quantal size of catecholamine-containing vesicles and the occurrence of amperometric events with a "foot" or "stand alone" signal (which reflects sluggish or incomplete dilation of the fusion pore). To examine whether BFA altered the Ca2+-dependence of exocytosis, we employed the whole-cell recording technique in conjunction with the capacitance measurement to measure exocytosis evoked from the entire cell during voltage-gated Ca2+ entry. Our results suggested that BFA treatment did not alter either the initial rate of capacitance increase or the total amount of capacitance increase. Therefore, in chromaffin cells, BFA treatment affects Ca2+-regulated exocytosis predominantly by increasing the quantal size and by slowing the fusion kinetics of some vesicles.  相似文献   

8.
How fusion pore formation during exocytosis affects the subsequent release of vesicle contents remains incompletely understood. It is unclear if the amount released per vesicle is dependent upon the nature of the developing fusion pore and whether full fusion and transient kiss and run exocytosis are regulated by similar mechanisms. We hypothesise that if consistent relationships exist between these aspects of exocytosis then they will remain constant across any age. Using amperometry in mouse chromaffin cells we measured catecholamine efflux during single exocytotic events at P0, 1 month and 6 months. At all ages we observed full fusion (amperometric spike only), full fusion preceded by fusion pore flickering (pre-spike foot (PSF) signal followed by a spike) and pure "kiss and run" exocytosis (represented by stand alone foot (SAF) signals). We observe age-associated increases in the size of all 3 modes of fusion but these increases occur at different ages. The release probability of PSF signals or full spikes alone doesn't alter across any age in comparison with an age-dependent increase in the incidence of "kiss and run" type events. However, the most striking changes we observe are age-associated changes in the relationship between vesicle size and the membrane bending energy required for exocytosis. Our data illustrates that vesicle size does not regulate release probability, as has been suggested, that membrane elasticity or flexural rigidity change with age and that the mechanisms controlling full fusion may differ from those controlling "kiss and run" fusion.  相似文献   

9.
We have used carbon-fibre amperometry to examine the kinetics of individual secretory granule fusion/release events in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. Transfection with plasmids encoding the light chains of botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) was used to investigate the effects of cleavage of syntaxin or SNAP-25 on exocytosis. Expression of BoNT/C1 or BoNT/E inhibited the extent of exocytosis that was evoked by application of digitonin/Ca(2+) to permeabilise and stimulate single chromaffin cells. Following neurotoxin expression, the residual release events were no different from those of control cells in their magnitude and kinetics from analysis of the amperometric spikes. In contrast, activation of protein kinase C (PKC) resulted in a modification of the kinetics of single granule release events. Following phorbol ester treatment, the amperometric spikes showed a significant decrease in their total charge due to a decrease in their mean half-width with increases in the rate of the initial rise and also the fall to baseline of the spikes. These changes were prevented by pre-treatment with the PKC inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide. These results suggest that PKC regulates the rate of fusion pore expansion and also subsequent pore closure or granule retrieval. A PKC-mediated regulation of kiss-and-run fusion may, therefore, control the extent of catecholamine release from single secretory granules. The experimental approach used here may provide further information on the protein constituents and regulation of the fusion pore machinery.  相似文献   

10.
Around 30% of exocytosis events recorded by amperometry at carbon fiber microelectrodes exhibit a pre-spike feature (PSF) termed a “foot”. This wave is associated with the release of the neurotransmitters via a transitory fusion pore, whilst the large, main exocytotic spike is due to complete release. The amperometric data reported herein were obtained using bovine chromaffin cells stimulated with either potassium or barium ions, two commonly-employed elicitors of exocytosis. Identical trends are observed with both activators: (i) they induce the same ratio (close to 30%) of events with a foot in the population of amperometric spikes, and (ii) spikes with a foot can be divided into two primary categories, depending on the temporal variation of the current wave (viz. as a ramp, or a ramp followed by a plateau). Correlations between the characteristics of the whole current spike, and of its observed foot, have been sought; such analyses demonstrate that the maximum current of both foot and spike signals are highly correlated, but, in contrast, the integrated charges of both are poorly correlated. Moreover, the temporal duration of the PSF is fully uncorrelated with any parameter pertaining to the main current spike. On the basis of these reproducible observations, it is hypothesized that the characteristics (dimensions and topology, at least) of each secretory vesicle determine the probability of formation of the fusion pore and its maximum size, whilst molecular factors of the cell membrane control its duration, and, consequently, the amount delivered prior to the massive exocytosis of catecholamines observed as a spike in amperometry.  相似文献   

11.
The SNARE proteins, syntaxin, SNAP-25, and VAMP, form part of the core machinery for membrane fusion during regulated exocytosis. Additional proteins are required to account for the speed, spatial restriction, and tight control of exocytosis and a key role is played by members of the Sec1/Munc18 family of proteins that have been implicated either in vesicle docking or fusion itself through their interactions with the corresponding syntaxin. Using amperometry to assay the kinetics of single vesicle fusion/release events in adrenal chromaffin cells, the effect of expression of syntaxin 1A mutants was examined. Overexpression of wild-type syntaxin or its cytoplasmic domain had no effect on the kinetics of release during single exocytotic events although the cytoplasmic domain reduced the frequency of exocytosis. In contrast, expression of either an open syntaxin 1A or the I233A mutant resulted in increased quantal size and a slowing of the kinetics of release. The wild-type and mutant syntaxins were overexpressed to a similar extent and the only common defect shown by the syntaxin 1A mutants was reduced binding to Munc18-1. These results are consistent with a role for Munc18-1 in controlling the late stages of exocytosis by binding to and limiting the availability of syntaxin in its open conformation. Modification of the Munc18-1/syntaxin 1A interaction would therefore be a key mechanism for the regulation of quantal size.  相似文献   

12.
Kesavan J  Borisovska M  Bruns D 《Cell》2007,131(2):351-363
Assembly of SNARE proteins between opposing membranes mediates fusion of synthetic liposomes, but it is unknown whether SNAREs act during exocytosis at the moment of Ca(2+) increase, providing the molecular force for fusion of secretory vesicles. Here, we show that execution of pre- and postfusional steps during chromaffin granule exocytosis depends crucially on a short molecular distance between the complex-forming SNARE motif and the transmembrane anchor of the vesicular SNARE protein synaptobrevin II. Extending the juxtamembrane region of synaptobrevin by insertion of flexible "linkers" reduces priming of granules, delays initiation of exocytosis upon stepwise elevation of intracellular calcium, attenuates fluctuations of early fusion pores, and slows rapid expansion of the pore in a linker-length dependent fashion. These observations provide evidence that v-SNARE proteins drive Ca(2+)-triggered membrane fusion at millisecond time scale and support a model wherein continuous molecular pulling by SNAREs guides the vesicle throughout the consecutive stages of exocytosis.  相似文献   

13.
The discharge of neurotransmitters from vesicles is a regulated process. Synaptobrevin-2, a snap receptor (SNARE) protein, participates in this process by interacting with other SNARE and associated proteins. Synaptobrevin-2 transmembrane domain is embedded into the vesicle lipid bilayer except for its last three residues. These residues are hydrophilic and constitute synaptobrevin-2 C-terminal flexible region. The residue Y113 of synaptobrevin-2 flexible region was mutated to lysine and glutamate. The effects of these mutations on the exocytotic process in chromaffin cells were assessed using capacitance measurements combined with amperometry and stimulation by flash photolysis of caged Ca2+. Both Y113E and Y113K mutations reduced the number of fusion-competent vesicles and reduced the rates of release of catecholamine molecules in quanta release events. These results exclude any direct interaction of this domain with the catecholamine molecules that are escaping through the fusion pore but favor its interaction with the vesicle membrane as a mean of regulating exocytosis.  相似文献   

14.
Regulated exocytosis can be split into a sequence of steps ending with the formation and the dilation of a fusion pore, a neck-like connection between the vesicle and the plasma membrane. Each of these steps is precisely controlled to achieve the optimal spatial and temporal profile of the release of signalling molecules. At the level of the fusion pore, tuning of the exocytosis can be achieved by preventing its formation, by stabilizing the unproductive narrow fusion pore, by altering the speed of fusion pore expansion and by completely closing the fusion pore. The molecular structure and dynamics of fusion pores have become a major focus of cell research, especially as a promising target for therapeutic strategies. Electrophysiological, optical and electrochemical methods have been used extensively to illuminate how cells regulate secretion at the level of a single fusion pore. Here, we describe recent advances in the structure and mechanisms of the initial fusion pore formation and the progress in therapeutic strategies with the focus on exocytosis.  相似文献   

15.
Munc18-1 promotes large dense-core vesicle docking.   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
Secretory vesicles dock at the plasma membrane before Ca(2+) triggers their exocytosis. Exocytosis requires the assembly of SNARE complexes formed by the vesicle protein Synaptobrevin and the membrane proteins Syntaxin-1 and SNAP-25. We analyzed the role of Munc18-1, a cytosolic binding partner of Syntaxin-1, in large dense-core vesicle (LDCV) secretion. Calcium-dependent LDCV exocytosis was reduced 10-fold in mouse chromaffin cells lacking Munc18-1, but the kinetic properties of the remaining release, including single fusion events, were not different from controls. Concomitantly, mutant cells displayed a 10-fold reduction in morphologically docked LDCVs. Moreover, acute overexpression of Munc18-1 in bovine chromaffin cells increased the amount of releasable vesicles and accelerated vesicle supply. We conclude that Munc18-1 functions upstream of SNARE complex formation and promotes LDCV docking.  相似文献   

16.
Munc18-1 is an essential synaptic protein functioning during multiple stages of the exocytotic process including vesicle recruitment, docking and fusion. These functions require a number of distinct syntaxin-dependent interactions; however, Munc18-1 also regulates vesicle fusion via syntaxin-independent interactions with other exocytotic proteins. Although the structural regions of the Munc18-1 protein involved in closed-conformation syntaxin binding have been thoroughly examined, regions of the protein involved in other interactions are poorly characterised. To investigate this we performed a random transposon mutagenesis, identifying domain 3b of Munc18-1 as a functionally important region of the protein. Transposon insertion in an exposed loop within this domain specifically disrupted Mint1 binding despite leaving affinity for closed conformation syntaxin and binding to the SNARE complex unaffected. The insertion mutation significantly reduced total amounts of exocytosis as measured by carbon fiber amperometry in chromaffin cells. Introduction of the equivalent mutation in UNC-18 in Caenorhabditis elegans also reduced neurotransmitter release as assessed by aldicarb sensitivity. Correlation between the two experimental methods for recording changes in the number of exocytotic events was verified using a previously identified gain of function Munc18-1 mutation E466K (increased exocytosis in chromaffin cells and aldicarb hypersensitivity of C. elegans). These data implicate a novel role for an exposed loop in domain 3b of Munc18-1 in transducing regulation of vesicle fusion independent of closed-conformation syntaxin binding.  相似文献   

17.
Adrenal medullary chromaffin cells are innervated by the sympathetic splanchnic nerve and translate graded sympathetic firing into a differential hormonal exocytosis. Basal sympathetic firing elicits a transient kiss-and-run mode of exocytosis and modest catecholamine release, whereas elevated firing under the sympathetic stress response results in full granule collapse to release catecholamine and peptide transmitters into the circulation. Previous studies have shown that rearrangement of the cell actin cortex regulates the mode of exocytosis. An intact cortex favors kiss-and-run exocytosis, whereas disrupting the cortex favors the full granule collapse mode. Here, we investigate the specific roles of two actin-associated proteins, myosin II and myristoylated alanine-rich C-kinase substrate (MARCKS) in this process. Our data demonstrate that MARCKS phosphorylation under elevated cell firing is required for cortical actin disruption but is not sufficient to elicit peptide transmitter exocytosis. Our data also demonstrate that myosin II is phospho-activated under high stimulation conditions. Inhibiting myosin II activity prevented disruption of the actin cortex, full granule collapse, and peptide transmitter release. These results suggest that phosphorylation of both MARCKS and myosin II lead to disruption of the actin cortex. However, myosin II, but not MARCKS, is required for the activity-dependent exocytosis of the peptide transmitters.  相似文献   

18.
The temperature dependence of Ca(2+)-triggered exocytosis was studied using carbon fiber amperometry to record the release of norepinephrine from PC12 cells. Single-vesicle fusion events were examined at temperatures varying from 12 to 28 degrees C, and with release elicited by depolarization. Measurements were made of the initial and maximum frequencies of exocytotic events, of fusion pore lifetime, flux through the open fusion pore, kiss-and-run versus full-fusion probability, and parameters associated with the shapes of amperometric spikes. The fusion pore open-state flux, and all parameters associated with spike shape, including area, rise time, and decay time, had weak temperature dependences and activation energies in the range expected for bulk diffusion in an aqueous solution. Kiss-and-run events also varied with temperature, with lower temperatures increasing the relative probability of kiss-and-run events by approximately 50%. By contrast, kinetic parameters relating to the frequency of exocytotic events and fusion pore transitions depended much more strongly on temperature, suggesting that these processes entail structural rearrangements of proteins or lipids or both. The weak temperature dependence of spike shape suggests that after the fusion pore has started to expand, structural transitions of membrane components are no longer kinetically limiting. This indicates that the content of a vesicle is expelled completely after fusion pore expansion.  相似文献   

19.
Neuroendocrine chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla represent a primary output for the sympathetic nervous system. Chromaffin cells release catecholamine as well as vaso- and neuro-active peptide transmitters into the circulation through exocytic fusion of large dense-core secretory granules. Under basal sympathetic activity, chromaffin cells selectively release modest levels of catecholamines, helping to set the “rest and digest” status of energy storage. Under stress activation, elevated sympathetic firing leads to increased catecholamine as well as peptide transmitter release to set the “fight or flight” status of energy expenditure. While the mechanism for catecholamine release has been widely investigated, relatively little is known of how peptide transmitter release is regulated to occur selectively under elevated stimulation. Recent studies have shown selective catecholamine release under basal stimulation is accomplished through a transient, restricted exocytic fusion pore between granule and plasma membrane, releasing a soluble fraction of the small, diffusible molecules. Elevated cell firing leads to the active dilation of the fusion pore, leading to the release of both catecholamine and the less diffusible peptide transmitters. Here we propose a molecular mechanism regulating the activity-dependent dilation of the fusion pore. We review the immediate literature and provide new data to formulate a working mechanistic hypothesis whereby calcium-mediated dephosphorylation of dynamin I at Ser-774 leads to the recruitment of the molecular motor myosin II to actively dilate the fusion pore to facilitate release of peptide transmitters. Thus, activity-dependent dephosphorylation of dynamin is hypothesized to represent a key molecular step in the sympatho-adrenal stress response.  相似文献   

20.
Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is a serine/threonine kinase involved in synaptogenesis and brain development, and its enzymatic activity is essential for slow forms of synaptic vesicle endocytosis. Recent work also has implicated Cdk5 in exocytosis and synaptic plasticity. Pharmacological inhibition of Cdk5 modifies secretion in neuroendocrine cells, synaptosomes, and brain slices; however, the specific mechanisms involved remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that dominant-negative inhibition of Cdk5 increases quantal size and broadens the kinetics of individual exocytotic events measured by amperometry in adrenal chromaffin cells. Conversely, Cdk5 overexpression narrows the kinetics of fusion, consistent with an increase in the extent of kiss-and-run exocytosis. Cdk5 inhibition also increases the total charge and current of catecholamine released during the amperometric foot, representing a modification of the conductance of the initial fusion pore connecting the granule and plasma membrane. We suggest that these effects are not attributable to an alteration in catecholamine content of secretory granules and therefore represent an effect on the fusion mechanism itself. Finally, mutational silencing of the Cdk5 phosphorylation site in Munc18, an essential protein of the late stages of vesicle fusion, has identical effects on amperometric spikes as dominant-negative Cdk5 but does not affect the amperometric feet. Cells expressing Munc18 T574A have increased quantal size and broader kinetics of fusion. These results suggest that Cdk5 could, in part, control the kinetics of exocytosis through phosphorylation of Munc18, but Cdk5 also must have Munc18-independent effects that modify fusion pore conductance, which may underlie a role of Cdk5 in synaptic plasticity.  相似文献   

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