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1.
Monoclonal antibodies were generated by immunizing mice with chick brain synaptic membranes and screening for immunoprecipitation of solubilized conotoxin GVIA receptors (N-type calcium channels). Antibodies against two synaptic proteins (p35--syntaxin 1 and p58--synaptotagmin) were produced and used to purify and characterize a ternary complex containing N-type channels associated with these two proteins. These results provided the first evidence for a specific interaction between presynaptic calcium channels and SNARE proteins involved in synaptic vesicle docking and calcium-dependent exocytosis. Immunoprecipitation experiments supported the conclusion that syntaxin 1/SNAP-25/VAMP/synaptotagmin I or II complexes associate with N-type, P/Q-type, but not L-type calcium channels from rat brain nerve terminals. Immunofluorescent confocal microscopy at the frog neuromuscular junction was consistent with the co-localization of syntaxin 1, SNAP-25, and calcium channels, all of which are predominantly expressed at active zones of the presynaptic plasma membrane facing post-synaptic folds rich in acetylcholine receptors. The interaction of proteins implicated in calcium-dependent exocytosis with presynaptic calcium channels may locate the sensor(s) that trigger vesicle fusion within a microdomain of calcium entry.  相似文献   

2.
We have labeled recycling synaptic vesicles at the somatic Bufo marinus neuromuscular junction with the styryl dye FM2-10 and provide direct evidence for refractoriness of exocytosis associated with a muscle activity-dependent form of long-term depression (LTD) at this synapse. FM2-10 dye unloading experiments demonstrated that the rate of vesicle exocytosis from the release ready pool (RRP) of vesicles was more than halved in the LTD (induced by 20 min of low frequency stimulation). Recovery from LTD, observed as a partial recovery of nerve-evoked muscle twitch amplitude, was accompanied by partial recovery of the refractoriness of RRP exocytosis. Unexpectedly, paired pulse plasticity, another routinely used indicator of presynaptic forms of synaptic plasticity, was unchanged in the LTD. We conclude that the LTD induces refractoriness of the neuromuscular vesicle release machinery downstream of presynaptic calcium entry.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Synaptic vesicles recycle repeatedly in order to maintain synaptic transmission. We have previously proposed that upon exocytosis the vesicle components persist as clusters, which would be endocytosed as whole units. It has also been proposed that the vesicle components diffuse into the plasma membrane and are then randomly gathered into new vesicles. We found here that while strong stimulation (releasing the entire recycling pool) causes the diffusion of the vesicle marker synaptotagmin out of synaptic boutons, moderate stimulation (releasing ~19% of all vesicles) is followed by no measurable diffusion. In agreement with this observation, synaptotagmin molecules labeled with different fluorescently tagged antibodies did not appear to mix upon vesicle recycling, when investigated by subdiffraction resolution stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy. Finally, as protein diffusion from vesicles has been mainly observed using molecules tagged with pH‐sensitive green fluorescent protein (pHluorin), we have also investigated the membrane patterning of several native and pHluorin‐tagged proteins. While the native proteins had a clustered distribution, the GFP‐tagged ones were diffused in the plasma membrane. We conclude that synaptic vesicle components intermix little, at least under moderate stimulation, possibly because of the formation of clusters in the plasma membrane. We suggest that several pHluorin‐tagged vesicle proteins are less well integrated in clusters.  相似文献   

5.
The functional integrity of neurons requires the bidirectional active transport of synaptic vesicles (SVs) in axons. The kinesin motor KIF1A transports SVs from somas to stable SV clusters at synapses, while dynein moves them in the opposite direction. However, it is unclear how SV transport is regulated and how SVs at clusters interact with motor proteins. We addressed these questions by isolating a rare temperature-sensitive allele of Caenorhabditis elegans unc-104 (KIF1A) that allowed us to manipulate SV levels in axons and dendrites. Growth at 20° and 14° resulted in locomotion rates that were ∼3 and 50% of wild type, respectively, with similar effects on axonal SV levels. Corresponding with the loss of SVs from axons, mutants grown at 14° and 20° showed a 10- and 24-fold dynein-dependent accumulation of SVs in their dendrites. Mutants grown at 14° and switched to 25° showed an abrupt irreversible 50% decrease in locomotion and a 50% loss of SVs from the synaptic region 12-hr post-shift, with no further decreases at later time points, suggesting that the remaining clustered SVs are stable and resistant to retrograde removal by dynein. The data further showed that the synapse-assembly proteins SYD-1, SYD-2, and SAD-1 protected SV clusters from degradation by motor proteins. In syd-1, syd-2, and sad-1 mutants, SVs accumulate in an UNC-104-dependent manner in the distal axon region that normally lacks SVs. In addition to their roles in SV cluster stability, all three proteins also regulate SV transport.  相似文献   

6.
A long standing question in synaptic physiology is how neurotransmitter-filled vesicles are rebuilt after exocytosis. Among the first steps in this process is the endocytic retrieval of the transmembrane proteins that are enriched in synaptic vesicles (SVs). At least six types of transmembrane proteins must be recovered, but the rules for how this multiple cargo selection is accomplished are poorly understood. Among these SV cargos is the vesicular glutamate transporter (vGlut). We show here that vGlut1 has a strong influence on the kinetics of retrieval of half of the known SV cargos and that specifically impairing the endocytosis of vGlut1 in turn slows down other SV cargos, demonstrating that cargo retrieval is a collective cargo-driven process. Finally, we demonstrate that different cargos can be retrieved in the same synapse with different kinetics, suggesting that additional post-endocytic sorting steps likely occur in the nerve terminal.  相似文献   

7.
Organization of Brain Synaptic Vesicle Proteins   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1  
Abstract: The topographical arrangement of proteins and glycoproteins of mouse brain synaptic vesicles was studied with trypsin and galactose oxidase, reagents known to be impermeable with respect to other membranes. Incubation of vesicles with trypsin at a concentration of 1 μg/ml extensively degraded seven polypeptides of molecular weights (M.W.) (×10-3) 125, 107, 95, 83, 70, 60, and 36; higher concentrations degraded two additional species of 75,000 and 46,000 M.W., while leaving unaffected polypeptides of M.W. 66,000, 55,000, 33,000, 26,000, 22,000, 19,000, and 16,000. All of the trypsin-sensitive species of greater than 70,000 M.W. stained positively with the periodic acid-Schiff reagent; several other glycoproteins, all of M.W. less than 70,000, were identified, and all of these were insensitive to trypsin. Galactose oxidase-NaB3H4 treatment of synaptic vesicles heavily and exclusively labeled material of greater than 70,000 M.W. All of the polypeptides studied were sensitive to each reagent when the synaptic vesicles were first treated with detergents. Extraction of vesicles with 0.05 M-NaOH partially or completely removed a wide variety of polypeptides, including most of those in the M.W. range 46,000–83,000; none of the glycoproteins was solubilized. Essentially the opposite results were obtained when the vesicles were extracted with 0.5% Triton X-100. Most of the vesicle's species were insensitive to several bisimidate cross-linking reagents. These results suggest that: (a) The polypeptides of M.W. 125K, 107K, 95K, 83K, 75K, 70K, 60K, 46K, and 36K are externally oriented in the vesicle, whereas those of 66K, 55K, 33K, 26K, 22K, 19K, and 16K are internally oriented; (b) the vesicles contain two classes of glycoproteins, one consisting of high-molecular-weight, externally oriented species that are rich in galactose, and the other consisting of low-molecular-weight, internally oriented species of relatively low galactose content; (c) the vesicles contain a large class of nonglycosylated species that are relatively loosely attached to the membrane; and (d) most of the vesicles' polypeptides are probably freely mobile in the membrane. The organization of synaptic vesicle proteins is compared with that of the proteins of synaptosomal plasma membrane, with which the vesicle is believed to fuse.  相似文献   

8.
Synapsins were the first presynaptic proteins identified and have served as the flagship of the presynaptic protein field. Here we review recent studies demonstrating that different members of the synapsin family play different roles at presynaptic terminals employing different types of synaptic vesicles. The structural underpinnings for these functions are just beginning to be understood and should provide a focus for future efforts.  相似文献   

9.
Secretory vesicles are localized in specific compartments within neurosecretory cells. Morphometric, cytochemical and electrophysiological techniques have allowed the definition of secretory vesicle compartments. These are different pools in which vesicles are in various states of releasability. The transit of vesicles between compartments is not random, but an event controlled and regulated by Ca2+ and the cortical F-actin network. Cortical F-actin disassembly, a Ca2+-dependent event, controls the transit of secretory vesicles from the reserve compartment to the release-ready vesicle pool. Furthermore, the recent development of new technical approaches (patch-clamp membrane capacitance, electrochemical detection of amines with carbon-fibre microelectrodes) has now permitted us to understand the kinetics of single vesicle exocytosis.  相似文献   

10.
Neuronal communication relies on chemical synaptic transmission for information transfer and processing. Chemical neurotransmission is initiated by synaptic vesicle fusion with the presynaptic active zone resulting in release of neurotransmitters. Classical models have assumed that all synaptic vesicles within a synapse have the same potential to fuse under different functional contexts. In this model, functional differences among synaptic vesicle populations are ascribed to their spatial distribution in the synapse with respect to the active zone. Emerging evidence suggests, however, that synaptic vesicles are not a homogenous population of organelles, and they possess intrinsic molecular differences and differential interaction partners. Recent studies have reported a diverse array of synaptic molecules that selectively regulate synaptic vesicles' ability to fuse synchronously and asynchronously in response to action potentials or spontaneously irrespective of action potentials. Here we discuss these molecular mediators of vesicle pool heterogeneity that are found on the synaptic vesicle membrane, on the presynaptic plasma membrane, or within the cytosol and consider some of the functional consequences of this diversity. This emerging molecular framework presents novel avenues to probe synaptic function and uncover how synaptic vesicle pools impact neuronal signaling.   相似文献   

11.
Under the assumption that vesicles are the anatomic correlate of quantal release, the forces governing the movement of synaptic vesicles inside neurons are analyzed. Semiquantitative calculations are presented to show that a diffuse layer field penetrates a few Debye lengths into the axoplasm. This field binds tightly a monolayer of water to the membrane forming the potential barrier for miniature end-plate potential (mepp) release. The action potential destroys the monolayer and pulls the vesicle to the membrane. The vesicles are brought to the synaptic zone and held there by a Na+ leak in the synaptic membrane. A stochastic theory of synaptic vesicle release is presented to explain experimental results. The rate of vesicle release is fractionated into a rate of membrane contacts by a vesicle and a rate of vesicle discharge per contact.  相似文献   

12.
ABSTRACT. We studied the cellular regulation of vesicle exocytosis by Entamoeba histolytica utilizing release of endocytosed 125iodine (125I) labeled tyrosine conjugated dextran; 125I-dextran entered the acid pH vesicles of the amebae and was not degraded during these studies. Exocytosis was temperature dependent with 74%, 36%, 4%, and 0% of 125I-dextran released after 120 min at 37°C, 31°C, 25°C, and 4°C, respectively (P < 0.01 for each). Exocytosis at 37°C was inhibited by cytochalasin D (10 μg/ml), EDTA (10 mM), or the putative intracellular calcium antagonist TMB-8 (250 μM) (P < 0.01 for each at ≥ 60 min). Calcium ionophore A23187 (1 μM) enhanced exocytosis at 5 and 15 min (P < 0.01). Elevation of vesicle pH with NH4Cl (10 mM) had no effect on release of 125I-dextran; phorbol myristate acetate (10?6 M) increased exocytosis by 46% at 30 min (P < 0.01). Centrifugation of amebae with target Chinese hamster ovary cells resulted in decreased 125I-dextran release into the cell supernatant after 30 and 60 min at 37°C (by 40% and 42%, respectively, P < 0.01); release of 125I-dextran returned to control values with addition of 1.0 g% galactose or GalNac but not with mannose or N-acetyl-D-glucosamine. Amebic phagocytosis of serum-exposed latex beads had no effect on release of dextran by amebae (n = 16). Exocytosis of acid pH vesicles by E. histolytica is temperature-, microfilament-, and calcium-dependent, and stimulated by phorbol esters.  相似文献   

13.
Signaling for Vesicle Mobilization and Synaptic Plasticity   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The hypothesis that release of classical neurotransmitters and neuropeptides is facilitated by increasing the mobility of small synaptic vesicles (SSVs) and dense core vesicles (DCVs) could not be tested until the advent of methods for visualizing these secretory vesicles in living nerve terminals. In fact, fluorescence imaging studies have only since 2005 established that activity increases secretory vesicle mobility in motoneuron terminals and chromaffin cells. Mobilization of DCVs and SSVs appears to be due to liberation of hindered vesicles to promote quicker diffusion. However, F-actin and synapsin, which have been featured in mobilization models, are not required for activity-dependent increases in the mobility of DCVs or SSVs. Most recently, the signaling required for sustained mobilization has been identified for Drosophila motoneuron DCVs and shown to increase synaptic transmission. Specifically, presynaptic endoplasmic reticulum ryanodine receptor-mediated Ca2+ release activates Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II to mobilize DCVs and induce post-tetanic potentiation (PTP) of neuropeptide release in the Drosophila neuromuscular junction. The shared signaling for increasing vesicle mobility and PTP links vesicle mobilization and synaptic plasticity.  相似文献   

14.
Axonal transport of synaptic vesicles (SVs) is a KIF1A/UNC-104 mediated process critical for synapse development and maintenance yet little is known of how SV transport is regulated. Using C. elegans as an in vivo model, we identified SAM-4 as a novel conserved vesicular component regulating SV transport. Processivity, but not velocity, of SV transport was reduced in sam-4 mutants. sam-4 displayed strong genetic interactions with mutations in the cargo binding but not the motor domain of unc-104. Gain-of-function mutations in the unc-104 motor domain, identified in this study, suppress the sam-4 defects by increasing processivity of the SV transport. Genetic analyses suggest that SAM-4, SYD-2/liprin-α and the KIF1A/UNC-104 motor function in the same pathway to regulate SV transport. Our data support a model in which the SV protein SAM-4 regulates the processivity of SV transport.  相似文献   

15.
We used water-soluble styryl pyridinium dyes that fluoresce at the membrane-water interface to study vesicle traffic in endothelial cells. Cultured endothelial cells derived from bovine and human pulmonary microvessels were incubated in styryl probes, washed to remove dye from the plasmalemmal outer face, and observed by digital fluorescence microscopy. Vesicles that derived from plasmalemma by endocytosis were filled with the styryl dye. These vesicles were distributed throughout the cytosol as numerous particles of heterogeneous diameter and brightness. Vesicle formation was activated 2-fold following addition of extracellular albumin whereas a control protein, immunoglobulin G, had no effect. Dye uptake was abrogated by labeling at low temperatures and inhibitors of phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI 3-kinase). Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (genistein and herbimycin A) prevented the albumin-induced vesicle formation. Cytochalasin B prevented vesicle redistribution indicating involvement of actin filaments in translocation of endosomes away from sites of vesicle formation. Styryl dye was lost from cells by exocytosis as evident by the disappearance of discrete fluorescent particles. N-ethylmaleimide and botulinum toxin types A and B caused cells to accumulate increased number of vesicles suggesting that exocytosis was regulated by NSF-dependent SNARE mechanism. The results suggest that phosphoinositide metabolism regulates endocytosis in endothelial cells and that extracellular albumin activates endocytosis by a mechanism involving tyrosine phosphorylation, whereas exocytosis is a distinct process regulated by the SNARE machinery. The results support the hypothesis that albumin regulates its internalization and release in vascular endothelial cells via activation of specific endocytic and exocytic pathways.  相似文献   

16.
CAPS (Ca2+-dependent activator protein for secretion) functions in priming Ca2+-dependent vesicle exocytosis, but the regulation of CAPS activity has not been characterized. Here we show that phosphorylation by protein kinase CK2 is required for CAPS activity. Dephosphorylation eliminated CAPS activity in reconstituting Ca2+-dependent vesicle exocytosis in permeable and intact PC12 cells. Ser-5, -6, and -7 and Ser-1281 were identified by mass spectrometry as the major phosphorylation sites in the 1289 residue protein. Ser-5, -6, and -7 but not Ser-1281 to Ala substitutions abolished CAPS activity. Protein kinase CK2 phosphorylated CAPS in vitro at these sites and restored the activity of dephosphorylated CAPS. CK2 is the likely in vivo CAPS protein kinase based on inhibition of phosphorylation by tetrabromo-2-benzotriazole in PC12 cells and by the identity of in vivo and in vitro phosphorylation sites. CAPS phosphorylation by CK2 was constitutive, but the elevation of Ca2+ in synaptosomes increased CAPS Ser-5 and -6 dephosphorylation, which terminates CAPS activity. These results identify a functionally important N-terminal phosphorylation site that regulates CAPS activity in priming vesicle exocytosis.Regulated neurotransmitter secretion is central to intercellular communication in the nervous system. Two types of secretory vesicles mediate neurotransmitter release; that is, synaptic vesicles that release transmitters such as glutamate at synapses and dense-core vesicles that release modulatory transmitters and neuropeptides at non-synaptic sites. Both types of secretory vesicles are recruited to docking sites on the plasma membrane where they are primed to a ready release state to undergo fusion in response to Ca2+ elevations. Many of the proteins that mediate the targeting, docking, priming, and Ca2+-dependent fusion of vesicles with the plasma membrane function in both synaptic vesicle and dense-core vesicle pathways (1). CAPS-12 (also known as Cadps1) is a 1289-residue protein that reconstitutes Ca2+-triggered dense-core vesicle exocytosis in permeable neuroendocrine cells at a priming step (24). CAPS is required for secretion of a subset of transmitters in Caenorhabditis elegans (5) and Drosophila melanogaster (6) and for priming dense-core vesicle exocytosis in neuroendocrine cells (7) and synaptic vesicle exocytosis in neurons (8). Vesicle priming reactions are extensively modulated during physiological demand (9), but mechanisms that regulate CAPS function remain to be identified.Reversible protein phosphorylation is a major mechanism for the regulation of cellular processes including vesicle exocytosis. Many proteins that function in evoked vesicle exocytosis are phosphoproteins (10, 11). The neuronal SNARE proteins syntaxin 1A, VAMP-2, and SNAP-25 are phosphorylated by several protein kinases in vitro (1214). Protein kinase C and protein kinase A sites on SNAP-25 affect refilling rates and size, respectively, of the primed pool of vesicles in chromaffin cells (15, 16). Several SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor)-binding proteins such as munc18, RIM1, and rabphilin undergo regulated phosphorylation, but it is not known whether phosphorylation affects function (10, 11, 17).Because the function of CAPS at a priming step in vesicle exocytosis may be regulated, we determined whether CAPS is phosphorylated. We show that CAPS is a phosphoprotein with functionally essential N-terminal phosphorylated Ser residues. Ser-5, -6, and -7 in CAPS were substrates for protein kinase CK2 in vitro and in vivo as well as for a Ca2+-dependent dephosphorylation mechanism. The results indicate that phosphorylation by protein kinase CK2 is necessary for CAPS activity in priming vesicle exocytosis and that regulated dephosphorylation may constitute a mechanism for terminating CAPS activity.  相似文献   

17.
Chromogranins (Cgs) are acidic proteins that have been implicated in several physiological processes such as vesicle sorting, the production of bioactive peptides and the accumulation of soluble species inside large dense core vesicles (LDCV). They constitute the main protein component in the vesicular matrix of LDCV. This latter characteristic of Cgs accounts for the ability of vesicles to concentrate catecholamines and Ca2+. It is likely that Cgs are behind the delay in the neurotransmitter exit towards the extracellular milieu after vesicle fusion, due to their low affinity and high capacity to bind solutes present inside LDCV. The recent availability of mouse strains lacking Cgs, combined with the arrival of several techniques for the direct monitoring of exocytosis, have helped to expand our knowledge about the mechanisms used by granins to concentrate catecholamines and Ca2+ in LDCV, and how they affect the kinetics of exocytosis. We will discuss the roles of Cgs A and B in maintaining the intravesicular environment of secretory vesicles and in exocytosis, bringing together the most recent findings from adrenal chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Caenorhabditis elegans TOM-1 is orthologous to vertebrate tomosyn, a cytosolic syntaxin-binding protein implicated in the modulation of both constitutive and regulated exocytosis. To investigate how TOM-1 regulates exocytosis of synaptic vesicles in vivo, we analyzed C. elegans tom-1 mutants. Our electrophysiological analysis indicates that evoked postsynaptic responses at tom-1 mutant synapses are prolonged leading to a two-fold increase in total charge transfer. The enhanced response in tom-1 mutants is not associated with any detectable changes in postsynaptic response kinetics, neuronal outgrowth, or synaptogenesis. However, at the ultrastructural level, we observe a concomitant increase in the number of plasma membrane-contacting vesicles in tom-1 mutant synapses, a phenotype reversed by neuronal expression of TOM-1. Priming defective unc-13 mutants show a dramatic reduction in plasma membrane-contacting vesicles, suggesting these vesicles largely represent the primed vesicle pool at the C. elegans neuromuscular junction. Consistent with this conclusion, hyperosmotic responses in tom-1 mutants are enhanced, indicating the primed vesicle pool is enhanced. Furthermore, the synaptic defects of unc-13 mutants are partially suppressed in tom-1 unc-13 double mutants. These data indicate that in the intact nervous system, TOM-1 negatively regulates synaptic vesicle priming.  相似文献   

20.
Central nerve terminals contain a small number of synaptic vesicles (SVs) that must sustain the fidelity of neurotransmission across a wide range of stimulation intensities. For this to be achieved, nerve terminals integrate a number of complementary endocytosis modes whose activation spans the breadth of these neuronal stimulation patterns. Two such modes are ultrafast endocytosis and activity‐dependent bulk endocytosis, which are triggered by stimuli at either end of the physiological range. Both endocytosis modes generate endosomes directly from the nerve terminal plasma membrane, before the subsequent production of SVs from these structures. This review will discuss the current knowledge relating to the molecular mechanisms involved in the generation of SVs from nerve terminal endosomes, how this relates to other mechanisms of SV production and the functional role of such SVs.   相似文献   

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