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Vitamin C Drives Reentrant Actin Phase Transition: Biphasic Exocytosis Regulation Revealed by Single-Vesicle Electrochemistry.

Authors :
Liu J
Jiang Y
Liu R
Jin J
Wei S
Ji W
He X
Wu F
Yu P
Mao L
Source :
Journal of the American Chemical Society [J Am Chem Soc] 2024 Jul 03; Vol. 146 (26), pp. 17747-17756. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 18.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Unveiling molecular mechanisms that dominate protein phase dynamics has been a pressing need for deciphering the intricate intracellular modulation machinery. While ions and biomacromolecules have been widely recognized for modulating protein phase separations, effects of small molecules that essentially constitute the cytosolic chemical atmosphere on the protein phase behaviors are rarely understood. Herein, we report that vitamin C (V <subscript>C</subscript> ), a key small molecule for maintaining a reductive intracellular atmosphere, drives reentrant phase transitions of myosin II/F-actin (actomyosin) cytoskeletons. The actomyosin bundle condensates dissemble in the low-V <subscript>C</subscript> regime and assemble in the high-V <subscript>C</subscript> regime in vitro or inside neuronal cells, through a concurrent myosin II protein aggregation-dissociation process with monotonic V <subscript>C</subscript> concentration increase. Based on this finding, we employ in situ single-cell and single-vesicle electrochemistry to demonstrate the quantitative modulation of catecholamine transmitter vesicle exocytosis by intracellular V <subscript>C</subscript> atmosphere, i.e., exocytotic release amount increases in the low-V <subscript>C</subscript> regime and decreases in the high-V <subscript>C</subscript> regime. Furthermore, we show how V <subscript>C</subscript> regulates cytomembrane-vesicle fusion pore dynamics through counteractive or synergistic effects of actomyosin phase transitions and the intracellular free calcium level on membrane tensions. Our work uncovers the small molecule-based reversive protein phase regulatory mechanism, paving a new way to chemical neuromodulation and therapeutic repertoire expansion.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-5126
Volume :
146
Issue :
26
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38889317
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c02710