Abstract

The spider venom alpha-latrotoxin (alpha-LTX) induces massive exocytosis after binding to surface receptors, and its mechanism is not fully understood. We have investigated its action using toxin-sensitive MIN6 beta-cells, which express endogenously the alpha-LTX receptor latrophilin (LPH), and toxin-insensitive HIT-T15 beta-cells, which lack endogenous LPH. alpha-LTX evoked insulin exocytosis in HIT-T15 cells only upon expression of full-length LPH but not of LPH truncated after the first transmembrane domain (LPH-TD1). In HIT-T15 cells expressing full-length LPH and in native MIN6 cells, alpha-LTX first induced membrane depolarization by inhibition of repolarizing K(+) channels followed by the appearance of Ca(2+) transients. In a second phase, the toxin induced a large inward current and a prominent increase in intracellular calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)) reflecting pore formation. Upon expression of LPH-TD1 in HIT-T15 cells just this second phase was observed. Moreover, the mutated toxin LTX(N4C), which is devoid of pore formation, only evoked oscillations of membrane potential by reversible inhibition of iberiotoxin-sensitive K(+) channels via phospholipase C, activated L-type Ca(2+) channels independently from its effect on membrane potential, and induced an inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor-dependent release of intracellular calcium in MIN6 cells. The combined effects evoked transient increases in [Ca(2+)](i) in these cells, which were sensitive to inhibitors of phospholipase C, protein kinase C, or L-type Ca(2+) channels. The latter agents also reduced toxin-induced insulin exocytosis. In conclusion, alpha-LTX induces signaling distinct from pore formation via full-length LPH and phospholipase C to regulate physiologically important K(+) and Ca(2+) channels as novel targets of its secretory activity.

Highlights

  • Property has been extensively exploited to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying exocytosis [1, 2]

  • These findings indicate that receptor-mediated signal transduction is not required for the action of ␣-LTX, other observations suggest that pore-mediated Ca2ϩ influx is not sufficient to explain the action of the toxin. ␣-LTX sensitizes exocytosis to Ca2ϩ in chromaffin cells and in synaptosomes [10, 11]

  • Clonal ␤-cells cell lines provide a useful model for toxin-induced exocytosis of large dense core vesicles, because they differentially express LPH: whereas high levels of LPH are found in the toxin-sensitive MIN6 cells, HIT-15 cells (HIT)-T15 cells express only very low amounts and are toxin-insensitive [16]

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Summary

Introduction

Property has been extensively exploited to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying exocytosis [1, 2]. HIT-T15 cells expressing full-length LPH exhibited an increase in [Ca2ϩ]i upon exposure to 2 nM ␣-LTX Exposure to ␣-LTX increased [Ca2ϩ]i in MIN6 cells, which express endogenous LPH (Fig. 4C).

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