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Publications (5)35.36 Total impact

  • Article: Munc18-1: sequential interactions with the fusion machinery stimulate vesicle docking and priming.
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    ABSTRACT: Exocytosis of secretory or synaptic vesicles is executed by a mechanism including the SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor) proteins. Munc18-1 is a part of this fusion machinery, but its role is controversial because it is indispensable for fusion but also inhibits the assembly of purified SNAREs in vitro. This inhibition reflects the binding of Munc18-1 to a closed conformation of the target-SNARE syntaxin1. The controversy would be solved if binding to closed syntaxin1 were shown to be stimulatory for vesicle fusion and/or additional essential interactions were identified between Munc18-1 and the fusion machinery. Here, we provide evidence for both notions by dissecting sequential steps of the exocytotic cascade while expressing Munc18 variants in the Munc18-1 null background. In Munc18-1 null chromaffin cells, vesicle docking is abolished and syntaxin levels are reduced. A mutation that diminished Munc18 binding to syntaxin1 in vitro attenuated the vesicle-docking step but rescued vesicle priming in excess of docking. Conversely, expressing the Munc18-2 isoform, which also displays binding to closed syntaxin1, rescued vesicle docking identical with Munc18-1 but impaired more downstream vesicle priming steps. All Munc18 variants restored syntaxin1 levels at least to wild-type levels, showing that the docking phenotype is not caused by syntaxin1 reduction. None of the Munc18 variants affected vesicle fusion kinetics or fusion pore duration. In conclusion, binding of Munc18-1 to closed syntaxin1 stimulates vesicle docking and a distinct interaction mode regulates the consecutive priming step.
    Journal of Neuroscience 09/2007; 27(32):8676-86. · 7.11 Impact Factor
  • Article: Imaging clathrin dynamics in Drosophila melanogaster hemocytes reveals a role for actin in vesicle fission.
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    ABSTRACT: Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is essential for maintaining many basic cellular processes. We monitored the dynamics of clathrin in live Drosophila melanogaster hemocytes overexpressing clathrin light chain fused to enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) using evanescent wave microscopy. Membrane-associated clathrin-coated structures (CCS) constitutively appeared at the peripheral filopodial membrane, moved centripetally while growing in intensity, before being eventually endocytosed within a few tens of seconds. This directed CCS traffic was independent of microtubules but could be blocked by latrunculin A. Taking advantage of available mutants of Drosophila, we expressed clathrin-EGFP in wasp and shibire mutant backgrounds to study the role of actin and dynamin in CCS dynamics and CME in hemocytes. We show that actin plays an essential role in CME in these cells, and that actin and dynamin act at the same stage, but independent of each other. Drosophila melanogaster hemocytes proved to be a promising model system to uncover the molecular events during CME in combining live-cell imaging and genetic analysis.
    Traffic 01/2007; 7(12):1614-27. · 4.92 Impact Factor
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    Article: Dissecting docking and tethering of secretory vesicles at the target membrane.
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    ABSTRACT: Secretory vesicles dock at their target in preparation for fusion. Using single-vesicle total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy in chromaffin cells, we show that most approaching vesicles dock only transiently, but that some are captured by at least two different tethering modes, weak and strong. Both vesicle delivery and tethering depend on Munc18-1, a known docking factor. By decreasing the amount of cortical actin by Latrunculin A application, morphological docking can be restored artificially in docking-deficient munc18-1 null cells, but neither strong tethering nor fusion, demonstrating that morphological docking is not sufficient for secretion. Deletion of the t-SNARE and Munc18-1 binding partner syntaxin, but not the v-SNARE synaptobrevin/VAMP, also reduces strong tethering and fusion. We conclude that docking vesicles either undock immediately or are captured by minimal tethering machinery and converted in a munc18-1/syntaxin-dependent, strongly tethered, fusion-competent state.
    The EMBO Journal 09/2006; 25(16):3725-37. · 9.20 Impact Factor
  • Article: Dissecting docking and tethering of secretory vesicles at the target membrane
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Secretory vesicles dock at their target in preparation for fusion. Using single-vesicle total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy in chromaffin cells, we show that most approaching vesicles dock only transiently, but that some are captured by at least two different tethering modes, weak and strong. Both vesicle delivery and tethering depend on Munc18-1, a known docking factor. By decreasing the amount of cortical actin by Latrunculin A application, morphological docking can be restored artificially in docking-deficient munc18-1 null cells, but neither strong tethering nor fusion, demonstrating that morphological docking is not sufficient for secretion. Deletion of the t-SNARE and Munc18-1 binding partner syntaxin, but not the v-SNARE synaptobrevin/VAMP, also reduces strong tethering and fusion. We conclude that docking vesicles either undock immediately or are captured by minimal tethering machinery and converted in a munc18-1/syntaxin-dependent, strongly tethered, fusion-competent state.
    The EMBO Journal 08/2006; 25(16):3725-3737. · 9.20 Impact Factor
  • Article: Differential control of clathrin subunit dynamics measured with EW-FRAP microscopy.
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    ABSTRACT: The clathrin triskelion is composed of three light chain (LC) and three heavy chain (HC) subunits. Cellular control of clathrin function is thought to be aimed at the LC subunit, mainly on the basis of structural information. To test this hypothesis in vivo, we used evanescent-wave photobleaching recovery to study clathrin exchange from single pits using LC (LCa and LCb) and HC enhanced green fluorescent protein fusion constructs. The recovery signal was corrected for cytosolic diffusional background, yielding the pure exchange reaction times. For LCa, we measured an unbinding time constant tau(LEa) = 18.9 +/- 1.0 seconds at room temperature, faster than previously published; for LCb, we found tau(LCb) = 10.6 +/- 1.9 seconds and for HC tau(HC) = 15.9 +/- 1.0 seconds. Sucrose treatment, ATP or Ca(2+) depletion blocked exchange of LCa completely, but only partially of HC, lowering its time constant to tau = 10.0 +/- 0.9 seconds, identical to the one for LCb exchange. The latter was also not blocked by Ca(2+) depletion or sucrose. We conclude that HCs bound both to LCa and to LCb contribute side by side to pit formation in vivo, but the affinity of LCa-free HC in pits is reduced, and the Ca(2+)- and ATP-mediated control of clathrin function is lost.
    Traffic 11/2005; 6(10):918-29. · 4.92 Impact Factor