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1.
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   

2.
We tested whether the giant secretory granules observed in the mast cells of the naturally occurring mutant beige mouse (BM) (C57BL/6N-bg) were also present in the adrenal chromaffin cells. The presence of large chromaffin granules (CG) would be a valuable tool for the study of exocytosis in neuronal tissues. Conversely, the observation of large vesicles within chromaffin cells that are different from CG could indicate that CG are of a different origin than granules of mast cells. Ultrastructural analysis demonstrated the presence of large lysososmal-like vesicles in the BM, and also a discrete increase in the number of CG with diameters larger than 240 nm but not of giant CG. In addition, amperometric measurements of single-event exocytosis, using carbon fiber microelectrodes, showed no differences between the quantal size of secretory events from BM and wildtype or bovine chromaffin cells. Minor but significant differences were found between the kinetics of exocytosis in BM cells andwild-type mouse cells. We conclude that CG, but not the abnormal-sized vesicles found in BM chromaffin cells contribute to the catecholamine secretion and that abnormal secretory granules are not present in adrenergic cell lineage.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Catecholamine secretion from chromaffin cells has been used for a long time as a general model to study exocytosis of large dense core secretory granules. Permeabilization and microinjection techniques have brought the possibility to dissect at the molecular level the multi-protein machinery involved in this complex physiological process. Regulated exocytosis comprises distinct and sequential steps including the priming of secretory granules, the formation of a docking complex between granules and the plasma membrane and the subsequent fusion of the granule with the plasma membrane. Key proteins involved in the exocytotic machinery have been identified. For instance, SNAREs which participate in the docking events in most intracellular transport steps along the secretory pathway, play a role in exocytosis in both neuronal and endocrine cells. However, in contrast to intracellular transport processes for which the highest fusion efficiency is required after correct targeting of the vesicles, the number of exocytotic events in activated secretory cells needs to be tightly controlled. We describe here the multistep control exerted by heterotrimeric and monomeric G proteins on the progression of secretory granules from docking to fusion and the molecular nature of some of their downstream effectors in neuroendocrine chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

5.
We have taken advantage of the differences between the preferential localization of secretion in the terminals of neurite-emitting bovine chromaffin cells in contrast with the random distribution secretion in spherical cells to study the possible molecular factors determining such localization by using immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy techniques. By analyzing the distribution of dopamine beta-hydroxylase present in the membrane of chromaffin granules, we found that vesicles migrate and accumulate in dense packages in the terminals of neurite processes. Neither members of the fusion core complex such as SNAP-25, nor nicotinic receptors are preferentially located in the terminals as would be expected from elements defining sites of release, thereby suggesting the presence of additional factors. Interestingly, we observed a preferential distribution of the P/Q subtype of Ca2+ channels in these neurite terminals and co-localization with vesicles present in these structures, in sharp contrast with the overall distribution of the L subtype channels. Using the same immunofluorescence techniques we were unable to detect N-type calcium channels. In addition, omega-agatoxin IVA was able to block 70% of the exocytotic release occurring into the neurites, whereas L-type blockers had a weak effect. Taken together our results strongly indicate that the co-localization of vesicles and clusters of P/Q Ca2+ channels may explain the precise localization of exocytotic sites in the terminals of neurite-emitting chromaffin cells, whereas the distribution of secretory sites in round cells may arise from the random presence of these factors as indicated by their partial co-localization.  相似文献   

6.
Calcium influx triggers exocytosis by promoting vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane. However, different subtypes of voltage-gated calcium channel (VGCC) have distinct roles in exocytosis. We previously reported that repetitive stimulation induces activity-dependent potentiation (ADP) which represents the increase of neurotransmitter release. Here, we show that L-type VGCC have a dominant role in ADP of large dense-core vesicle (LDCV) exocytosis. Repetitive stimulation activating VGCC can induce ADP, whereas activation of bradykinin (BK) G protein-coupled receptors or purinergic P2X cation channels can not. L-type VGCC has the dominant role in ADP of LDCV exocytosis by regulating Protein Kinase C (PKC)-epsilon translocation and phosphorylation of myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS), a target molecule of PKC-epsilon. We provide evidence that L-type VGCC, PKC-epsilon, and MARCKS, but not Q-type VGCC, are selectively located in lipid rafts. Also, PKC-epsilon translocation induced by L-type VGCC activation occurs in lipid rafts. Disruption of lipid rafts abolishes ADP of LDCV exocytosis and changes the fusion pore kinetics without affecting the first stimulation-induced exocytosis, showing that lipid rafts are involved in the potentiation process. Taken together, we suggest that L-type VGCC in lipid rafts selectively mediates ADP of LDCV exocytosis by regulating PKC-epsilon translocation and MARCKS phosphorylation.  相似文献   

7.
Protein kinase B/Akt has been implicated in the insulin-dependent exocytosis of GLUT4-containing vesicles, and, more recently, insulin secretion. To determine if Akt also regulates insulin-independent exocytosis, we used adrenal chromaffin cells, a popular neuronal model. Akt1 was the predominant isoform expressed in chromaffin cells, although lower levels of Akt2 and Akt3 were also found. Secretory stimuli in both intact and permeabilized cells induced Akt phosphorylation on serine 473, and the time course of Ca2+-induced Akt phosphorylation was similar to that of exocytosis in permeabilized cells. To determine if Akt modulated exocytosis, we transfected chromaffin cells with Akt constructs and monitored catecholamine release by amperometry. Wild-type Akt had no effect on the overall number of exocytotic events, but slowed the kinetics of catecholamine release from individual vesicles, resulting in an increased quantal size. This effect was due to phosphorylation by Akt, because it was not seen in cells transfected with kinase-dead mutant Akt. As overexpression of cysteine string protein (CSP) results in a similar alteration in release kinetics and quantal size, we determined if CSP was an Akt substrate. In vitro 32P-phosphorylation studies revealed that Akt phosphorylates CSP on serine 10. Using phospho-Ser10-specific antisera, we found that both transfected and endogenous cellular CSP is phosphorylated by Akt on this residue. Taken together, these findings reveal a novel role for Akt phosphorylation in regulating the late stages of exocytosis and suggest that this is achieved via the phosphorylation of CSP on serine 10.  相似文献   

8.
We have devised a new method that permits the investigation of exogenous secretory vesicle function using frog oocytes and bovine chromaffin granules, the secretory vesicles from adrenal chromaffin cells. Highly purified chromaffin granule membranes were injected into Xenopus laevis oocytes. Exocytosis was detected by the appearance of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase of the chromaffin granule membrane in the oocyte plasma membrane. The appearance of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase on the oocyte surface was strongly Ca(2+)-dependent and was stimulated by coinjection of the chromaffin granule membranes with InsP3 or Ca2+/EGTA buffer (18 microM free Ca2+) or by incubation of the injected oocytes in medium containing the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin. Similar experiments were performed with a subcellular fraction from cultured chromaffin cells enriched with [3H]norepinephrine-containing chromaffin granules. Because the release of [3H]norepinephrine was strongly correlated with the appearance of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase on the oocyte surface, it is likely that intact chromaffin granules and chromaffin granule membranes undergo exocytosis in the oocyte. Thus, the secretory vesicle membrane without normal vesicle contents is competent to undergo the sequence of events leading to exocytosis. Furthermore, the interchangeability of mammalian and amphibian components suggests substantial biochemical conservation of the regulated exocytotic pathway during the evolutionary progression from amphibians to mammals.  相似文献   

9.
Exocytotic machinery in neuronal and endocrine tissues is sensitive to changes in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration. Endocrine cell models, that are most frequently used to study the mechanisms of regulated exocytosis, are pancreatic beta cells, adrenal chromaffin cells and pituitary cells. To reliably study the Ca(2+) sensitivity in endocrine cells, accurate and fast determination of Ca(2+) dependence in each tested cell is required. With slow photo-release it is possible to induce ramp-like increase in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) that leads to a robust exocytotic activity. Slow increases in the [Ca(2+)](i) revealed exocytotic phases with different Ca(2+) sensitivities that have been largely masked in step-like flash photo-release experiments. Strikingly, in the cells of the three described model endocrine tissues (beta, chromaffin and melanotroph cells), distinct Ca(2+) sensitivity 'classes' of secretory vesicles have been observed: a highly Ca(2+)-sensitive, a medium Ca(2+)-sensitive and a low Ca(2+)-sensitive kinetic phase of secretory vesicle exocytosis. We discuss that a physiological modulation of a cellular activity, e.g. by activating cAMP/PKA transduction pathway, can switch the secretory vesicles between Ca(2+) sensitivity classes. This significantly alters late steps in the secretory release of hormones even without utilization of an additional Ca(2+) sensor protein.  相似文献   

10.
Neurons and neuroendocrine cells release transmitters and hormones by exocytosis, a highly regulated process in which secretory vesicles or granules fuse with the plasma membrane to release their contents in response to a calcium trigger. Several stages have been recognized in exocytosis. After recruitment and docking at the plasma membrane, vesicles/granules enter a priming step, which is then followed by the fusion process. Cortical actin remodelling accompanies the exocytotic reaction, but the links between actin dynamics and trafficking events remain poorly understood. Here, we review the action of Rho and ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF) GTPases within the exocytotic pathway in adrenal chromaffin cells. Rho proteins are well known for their pivotal role in regulating the actin cytoskeleton. ARFs were originally identified as regulators of vesicle transport within cells. The possible interplay between these two families of GTPases and their downstream effectors provides novel insights into the mechanisms that govern exocytosis.  相似文献   

11.
Rho GTPases are key regulators of the actin cytoskeleton in membrane trafficking events. We previously reported that Cdc42 facilitates exocytosis in neuroendocrine cells by stimulating actin assembly at docking sites for secretory granules. These findings raise the question of the mechanism activating Cdc42 in exocytosis. The neuronal guanine nucleotide exchange factor, intersectin-1L, which specifically activates Cdc42 and is at an interface between membrane trafficking and actin dynamics, appears as an ideal candidate to fulfill this function. Using PC12 and chromaffin cells, we now show the presence of intersectin-1 at exocytotic sites. Moreover, through an RNA interference strategy coupled with expression of various constructs encoding the guanine nucleotide exchange domain, we demonstrate that intersectin-1L is an essential component of the exocytotic machinery. Silencing of intersectin-1 prevents secretagogue-induced activation of Cdc42 revealing intersectin-1L as the factor integrating Cdc42 activation to the exocytotic pathway. Our results extend the current role of intersectin-1L in endocytosis to a function in exocytosis and support the idea that intersectin-1L is an adaptor that coordinates exo-endocytotic membrane trafficking in secretory cells.  相似文献   

12.
We have assessed the role of synapsins in catecholamine release by comparing the properties of exocytosis in adrenal chromaffin cells from wild-type and synapsin triple knock-out (TKO) mice. Brief depolarizations led to a greater amount of catecholamine release in chromaffin cells from TKO mice in comparison to chromaffin cells from wild-type mice. This increase in catecholamine release was due to an increased number of exocytotic events, while the properties of individual quanta of released catecholamine were unchanged. Barium ions produced similar amounts of catecholamine release from TKO and wild-type chromaffin cells, suggesting that the reserve pool of chromaffin granules is unchanged following loss of synapsins. Because expression of synapsin IIa in TKO chromaffin cells rescued the defect in depolarization-induced exocytosis, the TKO phenotype apparently results from loss of synapsin IIa. We conclude that synapsin IIa serves as a negative regulator of catecholamine release and that this protein influences exocytosis from a readily releasable pool of chromaffin granules. Further, because these defects in catecholamine release are different from those observed for glutamate and GABA release in TKO mice, we conclude that the functions of synapsins differ for vesicles containing different types of neurotransmitters.  相似文献   

13.
Spontaneous, short-lived, focal cytosolic Ca2+ transients were found for the first time and characterized in freshly dissociated chromaffin cells from mouse. Produced by release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores and mediated by type 2 and perhaps type 3 ryanodine receptors (RyRs), these transients are quantitatively similar in magnitude and duration to Ca2+ syntillas in terminals of hypothalamic neurons, suggesting that Ca2+ syntillas are found in a variety of excitable, exocytotic cells. However, unlike hypothalamic nerve terminals, chromaffin cells do not display syntilla activation by depolarization of the plasma membrane, nor do they have type 1 RyRs. It is widely thought that focal Ca2+ transients cause "spontaneous" exocytosis, although there is no direct evidence for this view. Hence, we monitored catecholamine release amperometrically while simultaneously imaging Ca2+ syntillas, the first such simultaneous measurements. Syntillas failed to produce exocytotic events; and, conversely, spontaneous exocytotic events were not preceded by syntillas. Therefore, we suggest that a spontaneous syntilla, at least in chromaffin cells, releases Ca2+ into a cytosolic microdomain distinct from the microdomains containing docked, primed vesicles. Ryanodine (100 microM) reduced the frequency of Ca2+ syntillas by an order of magnitude but did not alter the frequency of spontaneous amperometric events, suggesting that syntillas are not involved in steps preparatory to spontaneous exocytosis. Surprisingly, ryanodine also increased the total charge of individual amperometric events by 27%, indicating that intracellular Ca2+ stores can regulate quantal size.  相似文献   

14.
CAPS1 regulates catecholamine loading of large dense-core vesicles   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
CAPS1 is thought to play an essential role in mediating exocytosis from large dense-core vesicles (LDCVs). We generated CAPS1-deficient (KO) mice and studied exocytosis in a model system for Ca2+-dependent LDCV secretion, the adrenal chromaffin cell. Adult heterozygous CAPS1 KO cells display a gene dosage-dependent decrease of CAPS1 expression and a concomitant reduction in the number of docked vesicles and secretion. Embryonic homozygous CAPS1 KO cells show a strong reduction in the frequency of amperometrically detectable release events of transmitter-filled vesicles, while the total number of fusing vesicles, as judged by capacitance recordings or total internal reflection microscopy, remains unchanged. We conclude that CAPS1 is required for an essential step in the uptake or storage of catecholamines in LDCVs.  相似文献   

15.
The exocytosis of neurotransmitters is regulated by calcium and is plastic - features that suggest specialized regulation of the basic membrane trafficking process. Here we show that Synaptic Vesicle Protein 2 (SV2), a protein specific to neurons and endocrine cells, is required to maintain a pool of vesicles available for calcium-stimulated exocytosis. Direct measures of exocytosis in adrenal chromaffin cells showed that the calcium-induced exocytotic burst, which operationally defines the readily releasable pool of vesicles, was significantly reduced in mice lacking SV2A. Burst kinetics were normal in cells from SV2A knockout animals, however, indicating that SV2 functions before the final events of fusion. Analyses of SDS-resistant SNARE (soluble NSF (N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion) attachment protein receptor) complexes in brain tissue showed that loss of SV2A was associated with fewer SDS-resistant complexes. Our observations indicate that SV2 may modulate the formation of protein complexes required for fusion and therefore the progression of vesicles to a fusion-competent state.  相似文献   

16.
Annexin A2, a calcium-, actin-, and lipid-binding protein involved in exocytosis, mediates the formation of lipid microdomains required for the structural and spatial organization of fusion sites at the plasma membrane. To understand how annexin A2 promotes this membrane remodeling, the involvement of cortical actin filaments in lipid domain organization was investigated. 3D electron tomography showed that cortical actin bundled by annexin A2 connected docked secretory granules to the plasma membrane and contributed to the formation of GM1-enriched lipid microdomains at the exocytotic sites in chromaffin cells. When an annexin A2 mutant with impaired actin filament–bundling activity was expressed, the formation of plasma membrane lipid microdomains and the number of exocytotic events were decreased and the fusion kinetics were slower, whereas the pharmacological activation of the intrinsic actin-bundling activity of endogenous annexin A2 had the opposite effects. Thus, annexin A2–induced actin bundling is apparently essential for generating active exocytotic sites.  相似文献   

17.
Synaptic plasticity results from changes in the strength of synaptic transmission upon repetitive stimulation. The amount of neurotransmitter released from presynaptic terminals can regulate short-term plasticity that lasts for a few minutes. This review focuses on short-term plasticity of small synaptic vesicle (SSV) and large dense-core vesicle (LDCV) exocytosis. Whereas SSVs contain classical neurotransmitters and activate ion channels, LDCVs contain neuropeptides and hormones which primarily activate G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Thus, LDCV exocytosis is mainly associated with modulation of synaptic activity and cannot induce synaptic activity by itself. As in SSV exocytosis, repetitive stimulation leads to short-term enhancement of LDCV exocytosis: i.e., activity-dependent potentiation (ADP) which represents potentiation of neurotransmitter release. Short-term plasticity of SSV exocytosis results from Ca2+ accumulation, but ADP of LDCV exocytosis does not. Here, we review the signaling mechanisms and differences of short-term plasticity in exocytotic processes of SSV and LDCV.  相似文献   

18.
The regulated secretion of peptide hormones, neural peptides and many growth factors depends on their sorting into large dense core vesicles (LDCVs) capable of regulated exocytosis. LDCVs form at the trans-Golgi network, but the mechanisms that sort proteins to this regulated secretory pathway and the cytosolic machinery that produces LDCVs remain poorly understood. Recently, we used an RNAi screen to identify a role for heterotetrameric adaptor protein AP-3 in regulated secretion and in particular, LDCV formation. Indeed, mocha mice lacking AP-3 have a severe neurological and behavioral phenotype, but this has been attributed to a role for AP-3 in the endolysosomal rather than biosynthetic pathway. We therefore used mocha mice to determine whether loss of AP-3 also dysregulates peptide release in vivo. We find that adrenal chromaffin cells from mocha animals show increased constitutive exocytosis of both soluble cargo and LDCV membrane proteins, reducing the response to stimulation. We also observe increased basal release of both insulin and glucagon from pancreatic islet cells of mocha mice, suggesting a global disturbance in the release of peptide hormones. AP-3 exists as both ubiquitous and neuronal isoforms, but the analysis of mice lacking each of these isoforms individually and together shows that loss of both is required to reproduce the effect of the mocha mutation on the regulated pathway. In addition, we show that loss of the related adaptor protein AP-1 has a similar effect on regulated secretion but exacerbates the effect of AP-3 RNAi, suggesting distinct roles for the two adaptors in the regulated secretory pathway.  相似文献   

19.
Voets T 《Neuron》2000,28(2):537-545
In neurosecretory cells, intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) not only acts as the trigger for secretion but also regulates earlier steps in the secretory pathway. Here, a novel approach was developed to control [Ca2+]i over a broad concentration range, which allowed the quantification of three distinct actions of [Ca2+]i on large dense-core vesicle (LDCV) fusion in chromaffin cells from mouse adrenal slices. Basal [Ca2+]i regulated the transfer of vesicles toward a slowly releasable state, whereas further maturation to the readily releasable state was Ca2+ independent. [Ca2+]i levels above 3 microM triggered exocytosis of all readily and slowly releasable vesicles in two parallel, kinetically distinct fusion reactions. In a molecular context, these results suggest that Ca2+ acts both before and after trans-SNARE complex formation to regulate fusion competence and fusion kinetics of LDCVs.  相似文献   

20.
T Xu  U Ashery  R D Burgoyne    E Neher 《The EMBO journal》1999,18(12):3293-3304
NSF and alpha-SNAP have been shown to be required for SNARE complex disassembly and exocytosis. However, the exact requirement for NSF and alpha-SNAP in vesicular traffic through the secretory pathway remains controversial. We performed a study on the kinetics of exocytosis from bovine chromaffin cells using high time resolution capacitance measurement and electrochemical amperometry, combined with flash photolysis of caged Ca2+ as a fast stimulus. alpha-SNAP, a C-terminal mutant of alpha-SNAP, and NEM were assayed for their effects on secretion kinetics. Two kinetically distinct components of catecholamine release can be observed upon fast step-like elevation of [Ca2+]i. One is the exocytotic burst, thought to represent the readily releasable pool of vesicles. Following the exocytotic burst, secretion proceeds slowly at maintained high [Ca2+]i, which may represent vesicle maturation/recruitment, i.e. some priming steps after docking. alpha-SNAP increased the amplitude of both the exocytotic burst and the slow component but did not change their kinetics, which we examined with millisecond time resolution. In addition, NEM only partially inhibited the slow component without altering the exocytotic burst, fusion kinetics and the rate of endocytosis. These results suggest a role for alpha-SNAP/NSF in priming granules for release at an early step, but not modifying the fusion of readily releasable granules.  相似文献   

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