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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
We have studied exocytosis of single small granules from human neutrophils by capacitance recordings in the cell-attached configuration. We found that 2.2% of the exocytotic events were flickers. The flickers always ended with a downward step. This indicates closing of the fusion pore. During flickering, the fusion pore conductance remained below 1 nS, and no net membrane transfer was detectable. After fusion pore expansion beyond 1 nS the pore expanded irreversibly, leading to rapid full incorporation of the granule/vesicle into the plasma membrane. Following exocytosis of single granules, a capacitance decrease directly related to the preceding increase was observed in 7% of the exocytotic events. This decrease followed immediately after irreversible pore expansion, and is presumably triggered by full incorporation of the vesicle into the patch membrane. The capacitance decrease could be interpreted as endocytosis triggered by exocytosis. However, the gradual decrease could also reflect a decrease in the "free" patch area following incorporation of an exocytosed vesicle. We conclude that non-stepwise capacitance changes must be interpreted with caution, since a number of factors go into determining cell or patch admittance.  相似文献   

5.
While biological membrane fusion is classically defined as the leak-free merger of membranes and contents, leakage is a finding in both experimental and theoretical studies. The fusion stages, if any, that allow membrane permeation are uncharted. In this study we monitored membrane ionic permeability at early stages of fusion mediated by the fusogenic protein influenza hemagglutinin (HA). HAb2 cells, expressing HA on their plasma membrane, fused with human red blood cells, cultured liver cells PLC/PRF/5, or planar phospholipid bilayer membranes. With a probability that depended upon the target membrane, an increase of the electrical conductance of the fusing membranes (leakage) by up to several nS was generally detected. This leakage was recorded at the initial stages of fusion, when fusion pores formed. This leakage usually accompanied the "flickering" stage of the early fusion pore development. As the pore widened, the leakage reduced; concomitantly, the lipid exchange between the fusing membranes accelerated. We conclude that during fusion pore formation, HA locally and temporarily increases the permeability of fusing membranes. Subsequent rearrangement in the fusion complex leads to the resealing of the leaky membranes and enlargement of the pore.  相似文献   

6.
Time-resolved admittance measurements were used to follow formation of individual fusion pores connecting influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA)- expressing cells to planar bilayer membranes. By measuring in-phase, out-of-phase, and dc components of currents, pore conductances were resolved with millisecond time resolution. Fusion pores developed in stages, from small pores flickering open and closed, to small successful pores that remained open until enlarging their lumens to sizes greater than those of viral nucleocapsids. The kinetics of fusion and the properties of fusion pores were studied as functions of density of the fusion protein HA. The consequences of treating cell surfaces with proteases that do not affect HA were also investigated. Fusion kinetics were described by waiting time distributions from triggering fusion, by lowering pH, to the moment of pore formation. The kinetics of pore formation became faster as the density of active HA was made greater or when cell surface proteins were extensively cleaved with proteases. In accord with this faster kinetics, the intervals between transient pore openings within the flickering stage were shorter for higher HA density and more extensive cell surface treatment. Whereas the kinetics of fusion depended on HA density, the lifetimes of open fusion pores were independent of HA density. However, the lifetimes of open pores were affected by the proteolytic treatment of the cells. Faster fusion kinetics correlated with shorter pore openings. We conclude that the density of fusion protein strongly affects the kinetics of fusion pore formation, but that once formed, pore evolution is not under control of fusion proteins but rather under the influence of mechanical forces, such as membrane bending and tension.  相似文献   

7.
Razinkov VI  Cohen FS 《Biochemistry》2000,39(44):13462-13468
Cells expressing the hemagglutinin (HA) of influenza virus were fused to planar phospholipid bilayer membranes to evaluate the effects of sterols and sphingolipids in the target bilayer membranes on properties of fusion pores. Typically, in the absence of sterol, flickering pores are observed, followed by a successful pore (i.e., a pore that fully opens). The incorporation of cholesterol into the lipid bilayer had a marked effect: it greatly decreased the number of flickers, and the first pore formed was usually successful. Similar effects were produced by the sterols epicholesterol and 5beta-cholestanol. In contrast, the sterols cholesteryl acetate, coprostanol, and stanolone did not affect pore flickering, and a successful pore was observed to follow the typical number of flickers. 5alpha-cholestanol gave intermediate results. From these results, it follows that the 3-OH of cholesterol is essential to reduce flickering, but it does not matter if the 3-OH is in an alpha or beta configuration. The double bond is also not critical for the actions of cholesterol nor is the fact that it is a flat molecule. The sphingolipids sphingomyelin, lactosyl cerebroside, and glucosyl cerebroside tended to inhibit full pore enlargement, prolonging the stage of pore flickering. If a sphingolipid and a sterol that strongly interact were both included in the planar membrane, the pattern of flickering was the same as if neither had been included in the bilayer. However, if a sphingolipid and sterol that do not interact with each other were included in the bilayer, the reduced flickering characteristic of the sterol was observed.  相似文献   

8.
Cells expressing the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) fuse to planar bilayer membranes under acidic conditions. After an electrically quiescent perfusion stage (Q), a fusion pore forms that enlarges in three subsequent stages. A repetitively flickering pore stage (R) develops into a securely open stage (S) that exhibits conductances ranging from a few to tens of nS. The pore then expands to a terminal stage (T) with a large conductance on the order of one microSiemens. We have studied how virus strain, HA receptors in the target bilayer membrane, and cytoskeleton affect the time a fusion pore remains in each stage. These intervals are referred to as waiting times. In the quiescent stage, waiting times were very sensitive to the virus strain and presence of gangliosides (HA receptors) in the bilayer. When bilayers contained gangliosides, the waiting times in the Q stage for cells infected with the PR/8/34 strain of virus were exponentially distributed, whereas waiting times for cells infected with the Japan/305/57 strain were not so distributed. Without gangliosides, the waiting time distribution for PR/8/34 infected cells was complex. The waiting times in the R and S stages of pore growth were exponentially distributed under all tested conditions. Within the R stage, we analyzed the kinetics of the flickering pore by fitting the open and closed time distributions with a sum of two exponentials. Neither the open and closed time distributions nor the flickering pore conductance distributions were appreciably affected by virus strain or gangliosides. Colchicine and cytochalasin B increased the flicker rates, without affecting the waiting time in the R stage. We conclude that variations in amino acid sequences of the HAs and the presence of gangliosides as receptors within the target membrane critically affect the kinetics of fusion pore formation, but do not affect subsequent stages.  相似文献   

9.
SNARE-mediated membrane fusion proceeds via the formation of a fusion pore. This intermediate structure is highly dynamic and can flicker between open and closed states. In cells, cholesterol has been reported to affect SNARE-mediated exocytosis and fusion pore dynamics. Here, we address the question of whether cholesterol directly affects the flickering rate of reconstituted fusion pores in vitro. These experiments were enabled by the recent development of a nanodisc⋅black lipid membrane recording system that monitors dynamic transitions between the open and closed states of nascent recombinant pores with submillisecond time resolution. The fusion pores formed between nanodiscs that bore the vesicular SNARE synaptobrevin 2 and black lipid membranes that harbored the target membrane SNAREs syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25B were markedly affected by cholesterol. These effects include strong reductions in flickering out of the open state, resulting in a significant increase in the open dwell-time. We attributed these effects to the known role of cholesterol in altering the elastic properties of lipid bilayers because manipulation of phospholipids to increase membrane stiffness mirrored the effects of cholesterol. In contrast to the observed effects on pore kinetics, cholesterol had no effect on the current that passed through individual pores and, hence, did not affect pore size. In conclusion, our results show that cholesterol dramatically stabilizes fusion pores in the open state by increasing membrane bending rigidity.  相似文献   

10.
Catecholamine-containing small dense core granules (SDCGs, vesicular diameter of ~100 nm) are prominent in carotid glomus (chemosensory) cells and some neurons, but the release kinetics from individual SDCGs has not been studied in detail. In this study, we compared the amperometric signals from glomus cells with those from adrenal chromaffin cells, which also secrete catecholamine but via large dense core granules (LDCGs, vesicular diameter of ~200-250 nm). When exocytosis was triggered by whole-cell dialysis (which raised the concentration of intracellular Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)) to ~0.5 μmol/L), the proportion of the type of signal that represents a flickering fusion pore was 9-fold higher for glomus cells. Yet, at the same range of quantal size (Q, the total amount of catecholamine that can be released from a granule), the kinetics of every phase of the amperometric spike signals from glomus cells was faster. Our data indicate that the last phenomenon involved at least 2 mechanisms: (i) the granule matrix of glomus cells can supply a higher concentration of free catecholamine during exocytosis; (ii) a modest elevation of [Ca(2+)](i) triggers a form of rapid "kiss-and-run" exocytosis, which is very prevalent among glomus SDCGs and leads to incomplete release of their catecholamine content (and underestimation of their Q value).  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
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   

13.
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   

14.
A simple method is described for promoting and detecting fusion of liposomes with planar bilayer membranes. Liposomes containing ergosterol are doped with the pore-forming antibiotic nystatin, and the planar bilayer is kept ergosterol-free. Under these conditions, when a transbilayer salt gradient is applied, liposomes added to the high-salt side of the bilayer elicit the appearance of abrupt conductance jumps of 5-300 pS. The increase in conductance is transient, decaying back to baseline on the order of 10 s. Each of these "spikes" represents the fusion of a single liposome with the bilayer, resulting in the simultaneous insertion of many nystatin channels. Relaxation of the conductance back to baseline occurs because ergosterol, required for the integrity of the nystatin pore, diffuses away into the sterol-free planar bilayer after liposome fusion. When Torpedo Cl- channels are reconstituted into liposomes containing ergosterol and nystatin, fusion spikes are observed simultaneously with the appearance of Cl- channels. This method allows the calculation of the density of functional ion channels in a preparation of proteoliposomes containing reconstituted channel protein.  相似文献   

15.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,135(6):1831-1839
The formation of the fusion pore is the first detectable event in membrane fusion (Zimmerberg, J., R. Blumenthal, D.P. Sarkar, M. Curran, and S.J. Morris. 1994. J. Cell Biol. 127:1885-1894). To date, fusion pores measured in exocytosis and viral fusion have shared features that include reversible closure (flickering), highly fluctuating semistable stages, and a lag time of at least several seconds between the triggering and the pore opening. We investigated baculovirus GP64- induced Sf9 cell-cell fusion, triggered by external acid solution, using two different electrophysiological techniques: double whole-cell recording (for high time resolution, model-independent measurements), and the more conventional time-resolved admittance recordings. Both methods gave essentially the same results, thus validating the use of the admittance measurements for fusion pore conductance calculations. Fusion was first detected by abrupt pore formation with a wide distribution of initial conductance, centered around 1 nS. Often the initial fusion pore conductance was stable for many seconds. Fluctuations in semistable conductances were much less than those of other fusion pores. The waiting time distribution, measured between pH onset and initial pore appearance, fits best to a model with many (approximately 19) independent elements. Thus, unlike previously measured fusion pores, GP64-mediated pores do not flicker, can have large, stable initial pore conductances lasting up to a minute, and have typical lag times of < 1 s. These findings are consistent with a barrel-shaped model of an initial fusion pore consisting of five to eight GP64 trimers that is lined with lipid.  相似文献   

16.
Regulated exocytosis is thought to occur either by "full fusion," where the secretory vesicle fuses with the plasma membrane (PM) via a fusion pore that then dilates until the secretory vesicle collapses into the PM; or by "kiss-and-run," where the fusion pore does not dilate and instead rapidly reseals such that the secretory vesicle is retrieved almost fully intact. Here, we describe growing evidence for a third form of exocytosis, dubbed "kiss-and-coat," which is characteristic of a broad variety of cell types that undergo regulated exocytosis. Kiss-and-coat exocytosis entails prolonged maintenance of a dilated fusion pore and assembly of actin filament (F-actin) coats around the exocytosing secretory vesicles followed by direct retrieval of some fraction of the emptied vesicle membrane. We propose that assembly of the actin coats results from the union of the secretory vesicle membrane and PM and that this compartment mixing represents a general mechanism for generating local signals via directed membrane fusion.  相似文献   

17.
Cells expressing the E1 and E2 envelope proteins of Semliki Forest virus (SFV) were fused to voltage-clamped planar lipid bilayer membranes at low pH. Formation and evolution of fusion pores were electrically monitored by capacitance measurements, and membrane continuity was tracked by video fluorescence microscopy by including rhodamine-phosphatidylethanolamine in the bilayer. Fusion occurred without leakage for a negative potential applied to the trans side of the planar membrane. When a positive potential was applied, leakage was severe, obscuring the observation of any fusion. E1-mediated cell-cell fusion occurred without leakage for negative intracellular potentials but with substantial leakage for zero membrane potential. Thus, negative membrane potentials are generally required for nonleaky fusion. With planar bilayers as the target, the first fusion pore that formed almost always enlarged; pore flickering was a rare event. Similar to other target membranes, fusion required cholesterol and sphingolipids in the planar membrane. Sphingosine did not support fusion, but both ceramide, with even a minimal acyl chain (C(2)-ceramide), and lysosphingomyelin (lyso-SM) promoted fusion with the same kinetics. Thus, unrelated modifications to different parts of sphingosine yielded sphingolipids that supported fusion to the same degree. Fusion studies of pyrene-labeled SFV with cholesterol-containing liposomes showed that C(2)-ceramide supported fusion while lyso-SM did not, apparently due to its positive curvature effects. A model is proposed in which the hydroxyls of C-1 and C-3 as well as N of C-2 of the sphingosine backbone must orient so as to form multiple hydrogen bonds to amino acids of SFV E1 for fusion to proceed.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Human observers see a single mixed color (yellow) when different colors (red and green) rapidly alternate. Accumulating evidence suggests that the critical temporal frequency beyond which chromatic fusion occurs does not simply reflect the temporal limit of peripheral encoding. However, it remains poorly understood how the central processing controls the fusion frequency. Here we show that the fusion frequency can be elevated by extra-retinal signals during smooth pursuit. This eye movement can keep the image of a moving target in the fovea, but it also introduces a backward retinal sweep of the stationary background pattern. We found that the fusion frequency was higher when retinal color changes were generated by pursuit-induced background motions than when the same retinal color changes were generated by object motions during eye fixation. This temporal improvement cannot be ascribed to a general increase in contrast gain of specific neural mechanisms during pursuit, since the improvement was not observed with a pattern flickering without changing position on the retina or with a pattern moving in the direction opposite to the background motion during pursuit. Our findings indicate that chromatic fusion is controlled by a cortical mechanism that suppresses motion blur. A plausible mechanism is that eye-movement signals change spatiotemporal trajectories along which color signals are integrated so as to reduce chromatic integration at the same locations (i.e., along stationary trajectories) on the retina that normally causes retinal blur during fixation.  相似文献   

20.
We have recently shown that a maxi-K+ channel from vas deferens epithelial cells contains two Ba2+-binding sites accessible from the external side: a "flickering" site located deep in the channel pore and a "slow" site located close to the extracellular mouth of the channel. Using the patch-clamp technique, we have now studied the effect of internal Ba2+ on this channel. Cytoplasmic Ba2+ produced a voltage- and concentration-dependent "slow" type of block with a dissociation constant of approximately 100 microM. However, based on its voltage dependence and sensitivity to K+ concentration, this block was clearly different from the external "slow" Ba2+ block previously described. Kinetic analysis also revealed a novel "fast flickering" block restricted to channel bursts, with an unblocking rate of approximately 310 s(-1), some 10-fold faster than the external "flickering" block. Taken together, these results show that this channel contains multiple Ba2+-binding sites within the conduction pore. We have incorporated this information into a new model of Ba2+ block, a novel feature of which is that internal "slow" block results from the binding of at least two Ba2+ ions. Our results suggest that current models for Ba2+ block of maxi-K+ channels need to be revised.  相似文献   

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