Back to Search Start Over

Resident CAPS on dense-core vesicles docks and primes vesicles for fusion

Authors :
Greg Kabachinski
D. Michelle Kielar-Grevstad
Xingmin Aaron Zhang
Thomas Martin
Declan J. James
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Kabachinski, Greg
Source :
Molecular Biology of the Cell, American Society for Cell Biology
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The exocytosis of dense-core vesicles requires a priming step during which SNARE protein complexes assemble. CAPS, which assembles SNARE complexes and is required for vesicle priming, was imaged during events of single-vesicle fusion by TIRF microscopy. CAPS was found to be a resident on vesicles, with residence required for docking and fusion.<br />The Ca2+-dependent exocytosis of dense-core vesicles in neuroendocrine cells requires a priming step during which SNARE protein complexes assemble. CAPS (aka CADPS) is one of several factors required for vesicle priming; however, the localization and dynamics of CAPS at sites of exocytosis in live neuroendocrine cells has not been determined. We imaged CAPS before, during, and after single-vesicle fusion events in PC12 cells by TIRF micro­scopy. In addition to being a resident on cytoplasmic dense-core vesicles, CAPS was present in clusters of approximately nine molecules near the plasma membrane that corresponded to docked/tethered vesicles. CAPS accompanied vesicles to the plasma membrane and was present at all vesicle exocytic events. The knockdown of CAPS by shRNA eliminated the VAMP-2–dependent docking and evoked exocytosis of fusion-competent vesicles. A CAPS(ΔC135) protein that does not localize to vesicles failed to rescue vesicle docking and evoked exocytosis in CAPS-depleted cells, showing that CAPS residence on vesicles is essential. Our results indicate that dense-core vesicles carry CAPS to sites of exocytosis, where CAPS promotes vesicle docking and fusion competence, probably by initiating SNARE complex assembly.

Details

ISSN :
19394586
Volume :
27
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular biology of the cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a397176e243101312bfb5201837ee196