Abstract

Exocytosis is a universal process of eukaryotic cells, consisting of fusion between the vesicle and the plasma membranes, leading to the formation of a fusion pore, a channel through which vesicle cargo exits into the extracellular space. In 1986, Rand and Parsegian proposed several stages to explain the nature of membrane fusion. Following stimulation, it starts with focused stress destabilization of membranes in contact, followed by the coalescence of two membrane surfaces. In the next fraction of a millisecond, restabilization of fused membranes is considered to occur to maintain the cell's integrity. This view predicted that once a fusion pore is formed, it must widen abruptly, irreversibly and fully, whereby the vesicle membrane completely integrates with and collapses into the plasma membrane (full fusion exocytosis). However, recent experimental evidence has revealed that once the fusion pore opens, it may also reversibly close (transient or kiss-and-run exocytosis). Here, we present a historical perspective on understanding the mechanisms that initiate the membrane merger and fusion pore formation. Next, post-fusion mechanisms that regulate fusion pore stability are considered, reflecting the state in which the forces of widening and constriction of fusion pores are balanced. Although the mechanisms generating these forces are unclear, they may involve lipids and proteins, including SNAREs, which play a role not only in the pre-fusion but also post-fusion stages of exocytosis. How molecules stabilize the fusion pore in the open state is key for a better understanding of fusion pore physiology in health and disease.

Highlights

  • It is more than seven decades since Sir Bernard Katz and colleagues started to investigate synaptic vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane at the end-plate, progress in understanding this ubiquitous process of eukaryotic cells has been slow

  • Exocytosis is a universal process of eukaryotic cells, consisting of fusion between the vesicle and the plasma membranes, leading to the formation of a fusion pore, a channel through which vesicle cargo exits into the extracellular space

  • Based on biochemical and structural data available at that time, he considered the hypothesis “that the quanta of transmitter molecules are enclosed within synaptic vesicles which frequently collide with the axon membrane, and that calcium causes attachment and local fusion between vesicular and axon membranes” [4]

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Summary

Introduction

It is more than seven decades since Sir Bernard Katz and colleagues started to investigate synaptic vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane at the end-plate (the neuromuscular junction), progress in understanding this ubiquitous process of eukaryotic cells has been slow. This view predicted that once a fusion pore is formed, it must widen abruptly, irreversibly and fully, whereby the vesicle membrane completely integrates with and collapses into the plasma membrane (full fusion exocytosis).

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Conclusion

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