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1.
Patch clamp studies of single intact secretory granules.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The membrane of secretory granules is involved in the molecular events that cause exocytotic fusion. Several of the proteins that have been purified from the membrane of secretory granules form ion channels when they are reconstituted in lipid bilayers and, therefore, have been thought to form part of the molecular structure of the exocytotic fusion pore. We have used the patch clamp technique to study ion conductances in single isolated secretory granules from beige mouse mast cells. We found that the membrane of the intact granule had a conductance of < 50 pS. No abrupt changes in current corresponding to the opening and closing of ion channels were observed, even under conditions where exocytotic fusion occurred. However, mechanical tension or a large voltage pulse caused the breakdown of the granule membrane resulting in the abrupt opening of a pore with an ion conductance of about 1 nS that fluctuated rapidly and could expand to an immeasurably large conductance or close completely. Surprisingly, the behavior of these pores resembled the pattern of conductance changes of exocytotic fusion pores observed in degranulating beige mast cells. This similarity supports the view that the earliest fusion pore is formed upon the breakdown of a bilayer such as that formed during hemifusion.  相似文献   

2.
《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   

3.
Time-resolved admittance measurements were used to investigate the evolution of fusion pores formed between cells expressing influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) and planar bilayer membranes. The majority of fusion pores opened in a stepwise fashion to semistable conductance levels of several nS. About 20% of the pores had measurable rise times to nS conductances; some of these opened to conductances of approximately 500 pS where they briefly lingered before opening further to semistable conductances. The fall times of closing were statistically similar to the rise times of opening. All fusion pores exhibited semistable values of conductance, varying from approximately 2-20 nS; they would then either close or fully open to conductances on the order of 1 microS. The majority of pores closed; approximately 10% fully opened. Once within the semistable stage, all fusion pores, even those that eventually closed, tended to grow. Statistically, however, before closing, transient fusion pores ceased to grow and reversed their conductance pattern: conductances decreased with a measurable time course until a final drop to closure. In contrast, pore enlargement to the fully open state tended to occur from the largest conductance values attained during a pore's semistable stage. This final enlargement was characterized by a stepwise increase in conductance. The density of HA on the cell surface did not strongly affect pore dynamics. But increased proteolytic treatment of cell surfaces did lead to faster growth within the semistable range. Transient pores and pores that fully opened had indistinguishable initial conductances and statistically identical time courses of early growth, suggesting they were the same upon formation. We suggest that transient and fully open pores evolved from common structures with stochastic factors determining their fate.  相似文献   

4.
We have studied the fusion between voltage-clamped planar lipid bilayers and influenza virus infected MDCK cells, adhered to one side of the bilayer, using measurements of electrical admittance and fluorescence. The changes in currents in-phase and 90 degrees out-of- phase with respect to the applied sinusoidal voltage were used to monitor the addition of the cell membrane capacitance to that of the lipid bilayer through a fusion pore connecting the two membranes. When ethidium bromide was included in the solution of the cell-free side of the bilayer, increases in cell fluorescence accompanied tee admittance changes, independently confirming that these changes were due to formation of a fusion pore. Fusion required acidic pH on the cell- containing side and depended on temperature. For fusion to occur, the influenza hemagglutinin (HA) had to be cleaved into HA1 and HA2 subunits. The incorporation of gangliosides into the planar bilayers greatly augmented fusion. Fusion pores developed in four distinct stages after acidification: (a) a pre-pore, electrically quiescent stage; (b) a flickering stage, with 1-2 nS pores opening and closing repetitively; (c) an irreversibly opened stage, in which pore conductances varied between 2 and 100 nS and exhibited diverse kinetics; (d) a fully opened stage, initiated by an instantaneous, time- resolution limited, increase in conductance leveling at approximately 500 nS. The expansion of pores by stages has also been shown to occur during exocytosis in mast cells and fusion of HA-expressing cells and erythrocytes. We conclude that essential features of fusion pores are produced with proteins in just one of the two fusing membranes.  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the mechanism of cell fusion mediated by HA, the fusogenic hemagglutinin of the Influenza viral envelope. Single erythrocytes (RBCs) were attached to fibroblasts expressing the HA on their cell surface, and fusion of the paired cells was triggered by rapid acidification. The RBC membrane was stained with fluorescent lipid, and the fusion-induced escape of lipid into the fibroblast was observed by quantitative image analysis. At the same time, the formation of an aqueous connection (i.e., the fusion pore) between the two cells was monitored electrically. Within minutes after acidification, an electrical conductance between the two cells appeared abruptly as the fusion pore opened, and then increased gradually as the pore dilated. Later, fluorescent lipid diffused into the fibroblast, approaching equilibrium over the next 5-20 min. No lipid flux was seen while the pore conductance remained 0.5 nS or less. Evidently lipid flux requires a threshold pore size. Our finding suggests that the smallest and earliest fusion pores are surrounded by a ring of protein. A fusion pore expands by breaking this ring and recruiting lipid into its circumference.  相似文献   

6.
Infection of cells with influenza virus is mediated by the virus envelope protein hemagglutinin (HA) which induces fusion of viral and target membranes. Earlier we showed using fluorescent microscopy that HAb2 cells expressing HA on their plasma membranes fused with PLC cells when pH of the external medium was decreased to -5. In the present work we used double whole-cell recording to monitor the intercellular conductance in HAb2/PLC cell pairs during fusion. In approximately 40% of cell pairs the pH drop induced the intercellular conductance, which we interpret as the formation of a fusion pore. The following stages of the conductance growth were distinguished: initial fluctuations near zero (flicker), a subsequent slow increase up to 1-4 nS and a final rapid increase up to 10-100 nS (complete fusion). The first detectable intercellular conductance change (opening of a fusion pore) was accompanied by an increase in the conductances of both HAb2 and PLC cell membrane. This observation suggests that the early pore complex should be leaky. The dynamics of the intercellular conductance appeared to depend upon the voltage difference between the fusing HAb2 and PLC cells: voltages higher than 40 mV facilitated the conductance growth.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Fusion of a highly purified fraction of rat liver peroxisomal membranes to planar lipid bilayers incorporates large, cation-selective voltage-dependent pores. TheP K/P Cl ratio of these pores, estimated in KCl gradients, is close to 4. The pores display several conductance states and spend most of the time open at voltages near 0 mV, closing at more positive and negative voltages. At voltages near 0 mV the most frequent open state has a conductance of 2.4 nS in 0.3m KCl. At voltages more positive and more negative than 10 mV the most frequent open state displays a conductance of 1.2 nS in 0.3m KCl. With these results pore diameters of 3 and 1.5 nm, respectively, can be estimated. We suggest that these pores might account for the unusually high permeability of peroxisomes to low molecular weight solutes. Fusion also incorporates a perfectly anion-selective, two-open states channel with conductances of 50 and 100 pS in 0.1m KCl.  相似文献   

8.
Membrane fusion intermediates induced by the glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked ectodomain of influenza hemagglutinin (GPI-HA) were investigated by rapid freeze, freeze-substitution, thin section electron microscopy, and with simultaneous recordings of whole-cell admittance and fluorescence. Upon triggering, the previously separated membranes developed numerous hourglass shaped points of membrane contact (∼10–130 nm waist) when viewed by electron microscopy. Stereo pairs showed close membrane contact at peaks of complementary protrusions, arising from each membrane. With HA, there were fewer contacts, but wide fusion pores. Physiological measurements showed fast lipid dye mixing between cells after acidification, and either fusion pore formation or the lack thereof (true hemifusion). For the earliest pores, a similar conductance distribution and frequency of flickering pores were detected for both HA and GPI-HA. For GPI-HA, lipid mixing was detected prior to, during, or after pore opening, whereas for HA, lipid mixing is seen only after pore opening. Our findings are consistent with a pathway wherein conformational changes in the ectodomain of HA pull membranes towards each other to form a contact site, then hemifusion and pore formation initiate in a small percentage of these contact sites. Finally, the transmembrane domain of HA is needed to complete membrane fusion for macromolecular content mixing.  相似文献   

9.
Reconstitution experiments were performed on lipid bilayer membranes in the presence of purified mitochondrial porin from yeast and of detergent-solubilized mitochondrial outer membranes of a porin-free yeast mutant. The addition of the porin resulted in a strong increase of the membrane conductance, which was caused by the formation of ion-permeable channels in the membranes. Yeast porin has a single-channel conductance of 4.2 nS in 1 M KCl. In the open state it behaves as a general diffusion pore with an effective diameter of 1.7 nm and possesses properties similar to other mitochondrial porins. Surprisingly, the membrane conductance also increased in the presence of detergent extracts of the mitochondrial outer membrane of the mutant. Single-channel recordings of lipid bilayer membranes in the presence of small concentration of the mutant membranes suggested that this membrane also contained a pore. The reconstituted pores had a single-channel conductance of 2.0 nS in 1 M KCl and the characteristics of general diffusion pores with an estimated effective diameter of 1.2 nm. This means that the pores present in the mitochondrial outer membranes of the yeast mutant have a much smaller effective diameter than normal mitochondrial porins. Zero-current membrane potential measurements suggested that the second mitochondrial porin is slightly cation-selective, while yeast porin is slightly anion-selective in the open state but highly cation-selective in the closed state. The possible role of these pores in the metabolism of mitochondria is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Reconstitution experiments were performed on lipid bilayer membranes in the presence of detergent-solubilized mitochondrial outer membranes of a porin-free yeast mutant and of its parent strain. The addition of the detergent-solubilized material resulted in a strong increase in the membrane conductance which was not observed if only the detergent was added to the aqueous phase. Surprisingly, the membrane conductance induced by the detergent extracts of the mutant membrane was only a factor of 20 less than that caused by the outer membrane of the parent strain under otherwise identical conditions. Single-channel recordings of lipid bilayer membranes in the presence of mitochondrial outer membranes of the yeast mutant suggested the presence of a transient pore. The reconstituted pores had a single-channel conductance of 0.21 nS in 0.1 M KCl and the characteristics of general diffusion pores with an estimated effective diameter of 1.2 nm. The pores present in the mitochondrial outer membranes of the yeast mutant shared some similarities with the pores formed by mitochondrial and bacterial porins although their effective diameter is much smaller than those of the 'normal' mitochondrial porins which have a single-channel conductance of about 0.4 nS in 0.1 M KCl, corresponding to an effective diameter of 1.7 nm. Zero-current membrane-potential measurements suggested that the second mitochondrial porin is slightly cation-selective. Its possible role in the metabolism of mitochondria is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The major protein of the outer mitochondrial membrane of Neurospora was purified. On dodecylsulfate-containing gels it displayed a single band with an apparent molecular weight of 31 000. Reconstitution experiments with artificial lipid bilayers showed that this protein forms pores. Pore conductance was dependent on the voltage across the membrane. The protein inserted into the membrane in an oriented fashion, the membrane current being dependent on the sign of the voltage. Single pore conductance was 5nS, suggesting a diameter of 2 nm of the open pore. This mitochondrial protein shows a number of similarities to the outer membrane porins of gram-negative bacteria.  相似文献   

13.
Zhen Zhang 《Biophysical journal》2010,98(11):2524-2534
A fusion pore composed of lipid is an obligatory kinetic intermediate of membrane fusion, and its formation requires energy to bend membranes into highly curved shapes. The energetics of such deformations in viral fusion is well established, but the role of membrane bending in Ca2+-triggered exocytosis remains largely untested. Amperometry recording showed that during exocytosis in chromaffin and PC12 cells, fusion pores formed by smaller vesicles dilated more rapidly than fusion pores formed by larger vesicles. The logarithm of 1/(fusion pore lifetime) varied linearly with vesicle curvature. The vesicle size dependence of fusion pore lifetime quantitatively accounted for the nonexponential fusion pore lifetime distribution. Experimentally manipulating vesicle size failed to alter the size dependence of fusion pore lifetime. Manipulations of membrane spontaneous curvature altered this dependence, and applying the curvature perturbants to the opposite side of the membrane reversed their effects. These effects of curvature perturbants were opposite to those seen in viral fusion. These results indicate that during Ca2+-triggered exocytosis membrane bending opposes fusion pore dilation rather than fusion pore formation. Ca2+-triggered exocytosis begins with a proteinaceous fusion pore with less stressed membrane, and becomes lipidic as it dilates, bending membrane into a highly curved shape.  相似文献   

14.
The incorporation of porin protein F from the outer membrane of Pseudomonas aeruginosa into artificial lipid bilayers results in an increase of the membrane conductance by many orders of magnitude. The membrane conductance is caused by the formation of large ion-permeable channels with a single-channel conductance in the order of 5 nS for 1 M alkali chlorides. The conductance has an ohmic current vs. voltage relationship. Further information on the structure of the pore formed by protein F was obtained by determining the single-channel conductance for various species differing in charge and size, and from zero-current potential measurements. The channel was found to be permeable for large organic ions (Tris+, N(C2H5)4+, Hepes-) and a channel diameter of 2.2 nm could be estimated from the conductance data (pore length of 7.5 nm). At neutral pH the pore is about two times more permeable for cations than for anions, possibly caused by negative charges in the pore. The consistent observation of large water filled pores formed by porin protein F in model membrane systems is discussed in the light of the known low permeability of the Ps. aeruginosa outer membrane towards antibiotics. It is suggested that this results from a relatively low proportion of open functional porin protein F pores in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,127(6):1885-1894
The fusion of cells by influenza hemagglutinin (HA) is the best characterized example of protein-mediated membrane fusion. In simultaneous measurements of pairs of assays for fusion, we determined the order of detectable events during fusion. Fusion pore formation in HA-triggered cell-cell fusion was first detected by changes in cell membrane capacitance, next by a flux of fluorescent lipid, and finally by flux of aqueous fluorescent dye. Fusion pore conductance increased by small steps. A retardation of lipid and aqueous dyes occurred during fusion pore fluctuations. The flux of aqueous dye depended on the size of the molecule. The lack of movement of aqueous dyes while total fusion pore conductance increased suggests that initial HA-triggered fusion events are characterized by the opening of multiple small pores: the formation of a "sieve".  相似文献   

16.
Summary Single-channel analysis of electrical fluctuations induced in planar bilayer membranes by the purified human complement proteins C5b6, C7, C8, and C9 have been analyzed. Reconstitution experiments with lipid bilayer membranes showed that the C5b-9 proteins formed pores only if all proteins were present at one side of the membrane. The complement pores had an average single-channel conductance of 3.1 nS at 0.15m KCl. The histogram of the complement pores suggested a substantial variation of the size of the single channel. The linear relationship between single-channel conductance at fixed ionic strength and the aqueous mobility of the ions in the bulk aqueous phase indicated that the ions move inside the complement pore in a manner similar to the way they move in the aqueous phase. The minimum diameter of the pores as judged from the conductance data is approximately 3 nm. The complement channels showed no apparent voltage control or regulation up to transmembrane potentials of 100 mV. At neutral pH the pore is three to four times more permeable for alkali ions than for chloride, which may be explained by the existence of fixed negatively charged groups in or near the pore. The significance of these observations to current molecular models of the membrane lesion formed by these cytolytic serum proteins is considered.  相似文献   

17.
The protein which can be labelled by low concentrations of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide in the Mr region of 30 000-35 000 has been purified from pig heart mitochondria with a high yield and as a single band of apparent Mr 35 000 in dodecyl sulphate-containing gels. The protein is not identical with the phosphate carrier as suggested before, since the two proteins behave differently during isolation. Incorporation of the isolated 35 kDa dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-binding protein into lipid bilayer membranes causes an increase of the membrane conductance in definite steps, due to the formation of pores. The specific pore-forming activity increases during the purification procedure. The single pore conductance is about 4.0 nS, suggesting a diameter of 1.7 nm of the open pore. The pore conductance is dependent on the voltage across the membrane. Anion permeability of the pore is higher than cation permeability. These properties are similar to those described for isolated mitochondrial and bacterial porins. It is concluded that the 35 kDa dicyclohexylcarbodiimide-binding protein from pig heart mitochondria is identical with porin from outer mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

18.
The incorporation of porin protein F from the outer membrane of Pseudomonas aeruginosa into artificial lipid bilayers results in an increase of the membrane conductance by many orders of magnitude. The membrane conductance is caused by the formation of large ion-permeable channels with a single-channel conductance in the order of 5 nS for 1 M alkali chlorides. The conductance has an ohmic current vs. voltage relationship. Further information on the structure of the pore formed by protein F was obtained by determining the single-channel conductance for various species differing in charge and size, and from zero-current potential measurements. The channel was found to be permeable for large organic ions (Tris+, N(C2H5)4+, Hepes?) and a channel diameter of 2.2 nm could be estimated from the conductance data (pore length of 7.5 nm). At neutral pH the pore is about two times more permeable for cations than for anions, possibly caused by negative charges in the pore. The consistent observation of large water filled pores formed by porin protein F in model membrane systems is discussed in the light of the known low permeability of the Ps. aeruginosa outer membrane towards antibiotics. It is suggested that this results from a relatively low proportion of open functional porin protein F pores in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
One of the major outer membrane proteins of yeast mitochondria was isolated and purified. It migrated as a single band with an apparent molecular weight of 30 kDa on a SDS-electrophoretogram. When reconstituted in lipid bilayer membranes the protein formed pores with a single channel conductance of 0.45 nS in 0.1 M KCl. The pores had the characteristics of general diffusion pores with an estimated diameter of 1.7 nm. The pore of mitochondrial outer membranes of yeast shared some similarities with the pores formed by mitochondrial and bacterial porins. The pores switched to substates at voltages higher than 20 mV. The possible role of this voltagedependence in the metabolism of mitochondria is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Perforin (PFN) is a pore-forming protein produced by cytotoxic lymphocytes that aids in the clearance of tumor or virus-infected cells by a mechanism that involves the formation of transmembrane pores. The properties of PFN pores and the mechanism of their assembly remain unclear. Here, we studied pore characteristics by functional and structural methods to show that perforin forms pores more heterogeneous than anticipated. Planar lipid bilayer experiments indicate that perforin pores exhibit a broad range of conductances, from 0.15 to 21 nanosiemens. In comparison with large pores that possessed low noise and remained stably open, small pores exhibited high noise and were very unstable. Furthermore, the opening step and the pore size were dependent on the lipid composition of the membrane. The heterogeneity in pore sizes was confirmed with cryo-electron microscopy and showed a range of sizes matching that observed in the conductance measurements. Furthermore, two different membrane-bound PFN conformations were observed, interpreted as pre-pore and pore states of the protein. The results collectively indicate that PFN forms heterogeneous pores through a multistep mechanism and provide a new paradigm for understanding the range of different effects of PFN and related membrane attack complex/perforin domain proteins observed in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

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