13 research outputs found

    α-SNAP regulates dynamic, on-site assembly and calcium selectivity of Orai1 channels

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    Orai1 forms a highly calcium-selective pore of the calcium release activated channel, and α-SNAP is necessary for its function. Here we show that α-SNAP regulates on-site assembly of Orai1 dimers into calcium-selective multimers. We find that Orai1 is a dimer in resting primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts but displays variable stoichiometry in the plasma membrane of store-depleted cells. Remarkably, α-SNAP depletion induces formation of higher-order Orai1 oligomers, which permeate significant levels of sodium via Orai1 channels. Sodium permeation in α-SNAP–deficient cells cannot be corrected by tethering multiple Stim1 domains to Orai1 C-terminal tail, demonstrating that α-SNAP regulates functional assembly and calcium selectivity of Orai1 multimers independently of Stim1 levels. Fluorescence nanoscopy reveals sustained coassociation of α-SNAP with Stim1 and Orai1, and α-SNAP–depleted cells show faster and less constrained mobility of Orai1 within ER-PM junctions, suggesting Orai1 and Stim1 coentrapment without stable contacts. Furthermore, α-SNAP depletion significantly reduces fluorescence resonance energy transfer between Stim1 and Orai1 N-terminus but not C-terminus. Taken together, these data reveal a unique role of α-SNAP in the on-site functional assembly of Orai1 subunits and suggest that this process may, in part, involve enabling crucial low-affinity interactions between Orai1 N-terminus and Stim1

    Peptidergic cell-specific synaptotagmins in Drosophila: Localization to dense-core granules and regulation by the bHLH protein dimmed

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    Bioactive peptides are packaged in large dense-core secretory vesicles, which mediate regulated secretion by exocytosis. In a variety of tissues, the regulated release of neurotransmitters and hormones is dependent on calcium levels and controlled by vesicle-associated synaptotagmin (SYT) proteins. Drosophila express seven SYT isoforms, of which two (SYT-α and SYT-β) were previously found to be enriched in neuroendocrine cells. Here we show that SYT-α and SYT-β tissue expression patterns are similar, though not identical. Furthermore, both display significant overlap with the bHLH transcription factor DIMM, a known neuroendocrine (NE) regulator. RNAi-mediated knockdown indicates that both SYT-α and SYT-β functions are essential in identified NE cells as these manipulations phenocopy loss-of-function states for the indicated peptide hormones. In Drosophila cell culture, both SYT-α and neuropeptide cargo form DIMM-dependent fluorescent puncta that are coassociated by super-resolution microscopy. DIMM is required to maintain SYT-α and SYT-β protein levels in DIMM-expressing cells in vivo. In neurons normally lacking all three proteins (DIMM(−)/SYT-α(−)/SYT-β(−)), DIMM misexpression conferred accumulation of endogenous SYT-α and SYT-β proteins. Furthermore transgenic SYT-α does not appreciably accumulate in nonpeptidergic neurons in vivo but does so if DIMM is comisexpressed. Among Drosophila syt genes, only syt-α and syt-β RNA levels are upregulated by DIMM overexpression. Together, these data suggest that SYT-α and SYT-β are important for NE cell physiology, that one or both are integral membrane components of the large dense-core vesicles, and that they are closely regulated by DIMM at a post-transcriptional level

    Nanoscale protein architecture of the kidney glomerular basement membrane

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    In multicellular organisms, proteins of the extracellular matrix (ECM) play structural and functional roles in essentially all organs, so understanding ECM protein organization in health and disease remains an important goal. Here, we used sub-diffraction resolution stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM) to resolve the in situ molecular organization of proteins within the kidney glomerular basement membrane (GBM), an essential mediator of glomerular ultrafiltration. Using multichannel STORM and STORM-electron microscopy correlation, we constructed a molecular reference frame that revealed a laminar organization of ECM proteins within the GBM. Separate analyses of domains near the N- and C-termini of agrin, laminin, and collagen IV in mouse and human GBM revealed a highly oriented macromolecular organization. Our analysis also revealed disruptions in this GBM architecture in a mouse model of Alport syndrome. These results provide the first nanoscopic glimpse into the organization of a complex ECM. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01149.00

    CD2AP links cortactin and capping protein at the cell periphery to facilitate formation of lamellipodia

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    Understanding the physiology of complex relationships between components of signaling pathways and the actin cytoskeleton is an important challenge. CD2AP is a membrane scaffold protein implicated in a variety of physiological and disease processes. The physiological function of CD2AP is unclear, but its biochemical interactions suggest that it has a role in dynamic actin assembly. Here, we report that CD2AP functions to facilitate the recruitment of actin capping protein (CP) to the Src kinase substrate, cortactin, at the cell periphery, and that this is necessary for formation of the short branched filaments that characterize lamellipodium formation and are required for cell migration. Superresolution fluorescence microscopy demonstrated that the efficient colocalization of CP and cortactin at the cell periphery required CD2AP. As both cortactin and CP function to enhance branched actin filament formation, CD2AP functions synergistically to enhance the function of both proteins. Our data demonstrate how the interplay between specialized actin regulatory molecules shapes the actin cytoskeleton

    An essential and NSF independent role forα-SNAP in store-operated calcium entry

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    Store-operated calcium entry (SOCE) by calcium release activated calcium (CRAC) channels constitutes a primary route of calcium entry in most cells. Orai1 forms the pore subunit of CRAC channels and Stim1 is the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) resident Ca(2+) sensor. Upon store-depletion, Stim1 translocates to domains of ER adjacent to the plasma membrane where it interacts with and clusters Orai1 hexamers to form the CRAC channel complex. Molecular steps enabling activation of SOCE via CRAC channel clusters remain incompletely defined. Here we identify an essential role of α-SNAP in mediating functional coupling of Stim1 and Orai1 molecules to activate SOCE. This role for α-SNAP is direct and independent of its known activity in NSF dependent SNARE complex disassembly. Importantly, Stim1-Orai1 clustering still occurs in the absence of α-SNAP but its inability to support SOCE reveals that a previously unsuspected molecular re-arrangement within CRAC channel clusters is necessary for SOCE. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00802.00

    Dendritic cells utilize the evolutionarily conserved WASH and retromer complexes to promote MHCII recycling and helper T cell priming.

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    Immature dendritic cells (DCs) maintain a highly dynamic pool of recycling MHCII that promotes sampling of environmental antigens for presentation to T helper cells. However, the molecular basis of MHCII recycling and the cellular machinery that orchestrates MHCII trafficking are incompletely understood. Using a mouse model we show that WASH, an actin regulatory protein that facilitates retromer function, is essential for MHCII recycling and efficient priming of T helper cells. We further demonstrate that WASH deficiency results in impaired MHCII surface levels, recycling, and an accumulation of polyubiquitinated MHCII complexes, which are subsequently slated for premature lysosomal degradation. Consequently, conditional deletion of the Wash gene in DCs impairs priming of both conventional and autoimmune T helper cells in vivo and attenuates disease progression in a model of experimental autoimmune encephalitis (EAE). Thus, we identify a novel mechanism in which DCs employ the evolutionarily conserved WASH and retromer complex for MHCII recycling in order to regulate T helper cell priming

    WASH prevents the localization of MHCII into lysosomes following endocytosis.

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    <p>BMDCs derived from (A) <i>Vav-Cre</i> and (B) <i>WASH<sup>f/f</sup> Vav-Cre</i> were cultured with an antibody against MHCII following the endocytosis assay then fixed and labeled with antibodies against WASH and LAMP1 for microscopic analysis. (C) Images from A and B were analyzed for MHCII co-localization with LAMP1 using Pearson's co-localization coefficient in ZEN (Carl Zeiss). Zoomed images are demarcated by the white box and dashed lines in the adjacent images. For each condition, >20 individual cells were imaged. Images were collected with 100× oil objective. Scale bars, 10 µm. Bars represent mean ≥ SEM. Horizontal lines indicate statistical comparison between indicated groups, *<i>p</i>≤0.05. (D) Ubiquitinated MHCII was detected in BMDCs by immunoprecipitation of total MHCII followed by immunoblot for ubiquitin (Ub). Blots were subsequently stripped and reprobed with I-A<sup>b</sup> antibody as a loading control.</p

    VPS35 localizes with MHCII and Vps35 is required in MHCII cell surface retention.

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    <p>(A) BMDCs were transduced with shRNA constructs targeting VPS35 (shVPS35) or luciferase (shLuc) as a control. Cells were treated with the Golgi transport inhibitor Brefeldin-A for a 5-hour chase, and MHCII cell surface expression was determined by flow cytometry (see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0098606#s2" target="_blank">Materials and Methods</a> section for details). The percent of initial MHCII remaining on the plasma membrane after chase was calculated for three independent samples and plotted as mean ±s.d. To confirm efficient knockdown, VPS35 expression relative to β-actin was determined by quantitative PCR. (B) BMDCs were fixed and labeled with antibodies against MHCII and VPS35 for microscopic analysis. (C) Following the MHCII endocytosis assay, BMDCs were fixed and labeled with anti-VPS35. Zoomed images are demarcated by the white box and dashed lines in the adjacent image. For each condition, >20 individual cells were imaged. Images were collected with 100× oil objective. Scale bars, 10 µm and 1 µm.</p
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