Abstract

LPS is an efficient sensitizer of the neutrophil exocytic response to a second stimulus. Although neutrophil exocytosis in response to pathogen-derived molecules plays an important role in the innate immune response to infections, the molecular mechanism underlying LPS-dependent regulation of neutrophil exocytosis is currently unknown. The small GTPase Rab27a and its effector Munc13-4 regulate exocytosis in hematopoietic cells. Whether Rab27a and Munc13-4 modulate discrete steps or the same steps during exocytosis also remains unknown. Here, using Munc13-4- and Rab27a-deficient neutrophils, we analyzed the mechanism of lipopolysaccharide-dependent vesicular priming to amplify exocytosis of azurophilic granules. We found that both Munc13-4 and Rab27a are necessary to mediate LPS-dependent priming of exocytosis. However, we show that LPS-induced mobilization of a small population of readily releasable vesicles is a Munc13-4-dependent but Rab27a-independent process. LPS-induced priming regulation could not be fully explained by secretory organelle maturation as the redistribution of the secretory proteins Rab27a or Munc13-4 in response to LPS treatment was minimal. Using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy and a novel mouse model expressing EGFP-Rab27a under the endogenous Rab27a promoter but lacking Munc13-4, we demonstrate that Munc13-4 is essential for the mechanism of LPS-dependent exocytosis in neutrophils and unraveled a novel mechanism of vesicular dynamics in which Munc13-4 restricts motility of Rab27a-expressing vesicles to facilitate lipopolysaccharide-induced priming of exocytosis.

Highlights

  • Neutrophil exocytosis in response to pathogen-derived molecules plays an important role in extracellular bacterial killing and response to infection [1, 2]

  • Munc13-4 and Rab27a Are Essential Regulators of Neutrophil Exocytic Response to Lipopolysaccharide—To analyze the role of Munc13-4 and Rab27a in LPS-dependent priming and exocytosis, we studied the exocytic response of Munc13-4null (Munc13-4Jinx/Jinx) and Rab27a-deficient neutrophils to LPS ex vivo

  • To that observed in wild type cells, azurophilic granule exocytosis was markedly impaired in neutrophils from Munc13-4Jinx/Jinx mice even after LPS-induced priming (Fig. 1A), suggesting that Munc13-4 is an important regulator of LPS-dependent neutrophil priming or may regulate a post-priming mechanism during azurophilic granule exocytosis

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Summary

Introduction

Neutrophil exocytosis in response to pathogen-derived molecules plays an important role in extracellular bacterial killing and response to infection [1, 2]. Using Munc13-4- and Rab27a-deficient neutrophils, we analyzed the mechanism of lipopolysaccharide-dependent vesicular priming to amplify exocytosis of azurophilic granules.

Results
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