Abstract

Secretory carrier membrane proteins (SCAMPs) comprise a family of ubiquitous membrane proteins of transport vesicles with no known function. Their universal presence in all cells suggests a fundamental role in membrane traffic. SCAMPs are particularly highly expressed in organelles that undergo regulated exocytosis, such as synaptic vesicles and mast cell granules. Of the three currently known SCAMPs, SCAMP1 is the most abundant. To investigate the possible functions of SCAMP1, we generated mice that lack SCAMP1. SCAMP1-deficient mice are viable and fertile. They exhibit no changes in the overall architecture or the protein composition of the brain or alterations in peripheral organs. Capacitance measurements in mast cells demonstrated that exocytosis could be triggered reliably by GTPgammaS in SCAMP1-deficient cells. The initial overall capacitance of mast cells was similar between wild type and mutant mice, but the final cell capacitance after completion of exocytosis, was significantly smaller in SCAMP1-deficient cells than in wild type cells. Furthermore, there was an increased proportion of reversible fusion events, which may have caused the decrease in the overall capacitance change observed after exocytosis. Our data show that SCAMP1 is not essential for exocytosis, as such, and does not determine the stability or size of secretory vesicles, but is required for the full execution of stable exocytosis in mast cells. This phenotype could be the result of a function of SCAMP1 in the formation of stable fusion pores during exocytosis or of a role of SCAMP1 in the regulation of endocytosis after formation of fusion pores.

Highlights

  • SCAMP1 is the most abundant SCAMP isoform in mammals and the only currently described isoform that is present in synaptic vesicles

  • We generated a null mutant for SCAMP1 and analyzed its phenotype

  • Our most remarkable observation is that mice lacking SCAMP1 exhibit relatively few changes: SCAMP1 is clearly not an essential gene, is not required for the stability or normal size of secretory vesicles, and is not needed for exo- or endocytosis as such

Read more

Summary

Introduction

SCAMP1 is the most abundant SCAMP isoform in mammals and the only currently described isoform that is present in synaptic vesicles. We generated a null mutant for SCAMP1 and analyzed its phenotype. Our most remarkable observation is that mice lacking SCAMP1 exhibit relatively few changes: SCAMP1 is clearly not an essential gene, is not required for the stability or normal size of secretory vesicles, and is not needed for exo- or endocytosis as such.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call