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A new approach to the molecular analysis of docking, priming, and regulated membrane fusion
Authors:Tatiana P. Rogasevskaia  Jens R. Coorssen
Affiliation:(1) Department of Molecular Physiology, School of Medicine, and Molecular Medicine Research Group, and Nanoscale Research Group, University of Western Sydney, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith South DC, NSW, 1797, Australia;(2) Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Calgary, 183 HMR, 3330 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, AB, T2N 4N1, Canada;
Abstract:Studies using isolated sea urchin cortical vesicles have proven invaluable in dissecting mechanisms of Ca2+-triggered membrane fusion. However, only acute molecular manipulations are possible in vitro. Here, using selective pharmacological manipulations of sea urchin eggs ex vivo, we test the hypothesis that specific lipidic components of the membrane matrix selectively affect defined late stages of exocytosis, particularly the Ca2+-triggered steps of fast membrane fusion. Egg treatments with cholesterol-lowering drugs resulted in the inhibition of vesicle fusion. Exogenous cholesterol recovered fusion extent and efficiency in cholesterol-depleted membranes; α-tocopherol, a structurally dissimilar curvature analogue, selectively restored fusion extent. Inhibition of phospholipase C reduced vesicle phosphatidylethanolamine and suppressed both the extent and kinetics of fusion. Although phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase inhibition altered levels of polyphosphoinositide species and reduced all fusion parameters, sequestering polyphosphoinositides selectively inhibited fusion kinetics. Thus, cholesterol and phosphatidylethanolamine play direct roles in the fusion pathway, contributing negative curvature. Cholesterol also organizes the physiological fusion site, defining fusion efficiency. A selective influence of phosphatidylethanolamine on fusion kinetics sheds light on the local microdomain structure at the site of docking/fusion. Polyphosphoinositides have modulatory upstream roles in priming: alterations in specific polyphosphoinositides likely represent the terminal priming steps defining fully docked, release-ready vesicles. Thus, this pharmacological approach has the potential to be a robust high-throughput platform to identify molecular components of the physiological fusion machine critical to docking, priming, and triggered fusion.
Keywords:Sea urchin eggs   Cortical vesicles   Ca2+-triggered fusion   Priming   Cholesterol   Phosphatidylethanolamine   Polyphosphoinositides
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