Intermediate steps in the formation of neuronal SNARE complexes
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Pribicevic, Sonja; C. Graham, Abigail; S. Cafiso, David; Pérez Lara, Francisco Ángel; Jahn, ReinhardEditorial
Elsevier
Date
2024-08-16Referencia bibliográfica
Pribicevic, S. et. al. J. Biol. Chem. (2024) 300(8) 107591. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2024.107591]
Patrocinador
National Institutes of Health (RPPR P01 GM072694–12); Ramon y Cajal grant (RYC2018-023837-I); Max Planck Society through the funding of the Max Planck Partner Group on "Regulation of the SNARE zippering by complexin and synaptotagmins" at the University of GranadaRésumé
Neuronal exocytosis requires the assembly of three SNARE
proteins, syntaxin and SNAP25 on the plasma membrane and
synaptobrevin on the vesicle membrane. However, the precise
steps in this process and the points at which assembly and
fusion are controlled by regulatory proteins are unclear. In the
present work, we examine the kinetics and intermediate states
during SNARE assembly in vitro using a combination of time
resolved fluorescence and EPR spectroscopy. We show that
syntaxin rapidly forms a dimer prior to forming the kinetically
stable 2:1 syntaxin:SNAP25 complex and that the 2:1 complex
is not diminished by the presence of excess SNAP25. Moreover,
the 2:1 complex is temperature-dependent with a reduced
concentration at 37 C. The two segments of SNAP25 behave
differently. The N-terminal SN1 segment of SNAP25 exhibits a
pronounced increase in backbone ordering from the N- to the
C-terminus that is not seen in the C-terminal SNAP25 segment
SN2. Both the SN1 and SN2 segments of SNAP25 will assemble
with syntaxin; however, while the association of the SN1
segment with syntaxin produces a stable 2:2 (SN1:syntaxin)
complex, the complex formed between SN2 and syntaxin is
largely disordered. Synaptobrevin fails to bind syntaxin alone
but will associate with syntaxin in the presence of either the
SN1 or SN2 segments; however, the synaptobrevin:syntaxin:
SN2 complex remains disordered. Taken together, these data
suggest that synaptobrevin and syntaxin do not assemble in the
absence of SNAP25 and that the SN2 segment of SNAP25 is the
last to enter the SNARE complex.