SNAP-25 is required for a late postdocking step in Ca2+-dependent exocytosis |
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Authors: | A Banerjee JA Kowalchyk BR DasGupta TF Martin |
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Affiliation: | Department of Food Microbiology and Toxicology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA. |
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Abstract: | The Ca2+-activated fusion of large dense core vesicles (LDCVs) with the plasma membrane is reconstituted in mechanically permeabilized PC12 cells by provision of millimolar MgATP and cytosolic proteins. Ca2+-activated LDCV exocytosis was inhibited completely by the type E but not the type A botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) even though both BoNTs were equally effective in proteolytically cleaving the synaptosome-associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP-25). The greater inhibition of exocytosis by BoNT E correlated with a greater destabilization of detergent-extracted complexes consisting of SNAP-25, synaptobrevin, and syntaxin. LDCVs in permeable PC12 cells can be poised at a late postdocking, prefusion state by MgATP-dependent priming processes catalyzed by N-ethylmaleimide sensitive factor and priming in exocytosis proteins. BoNT E completely blocked Ca2+-activated LDCV exocytosis in ATP-primed cells, whereas BoNT A was only slightly inhibitory, implying that the C-terminal region of SNAP-25 (Ile181-Gln197) between the cleavage sites for BoNT E and BoNT A is essential for late postdocking steps. A required role for SNAP-25 at this stage was also indicated by inhibition of Ca2+-activated LDCV fusion in ATP-primed cells by a C-terminal peptide antibody. We conclude that plasma membrane SNAP-25, particularly residues 181-197, is required for Ca2+-regulated membrane fusion at a step beyond LDCV docking and ATP utilization. |
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