Abstract

Dynamins are fission proteins that mediate endocytic and exocytic membrane events and are pharmacological therapeutic targets. These studies investigate whether dynamin II regulates constitutive protein secretion and show for the first time that pharmacological inhibition of dynamin decreases secretion of apolipoprotein E (apoE) and several other proteins constitutively secreted from primary human macrophages. Inhibitors that target recruitment of dynamin to membranes (MiTMABs) or directly target the GTPase domain (Dyngo or Dynole series), dose- and time- dependently reduced the secretion of apoE. SiRNA oligo’s targeting all isoforms of dynamin II confirmed the involvement of dynamin II in apoE secretion. Inhibition of secretion was not mediated via effects on mRNA or protein synthesis. 2D-gel electrophoresis showed that inhibition occurred after apoE was processed and glycosylated in the Golgi and live cell imaging showed that inhibited secretion was associated with reduced post-Golgi movement of apoE-GFP-containing vesicles. The effect was not restricted to macrophages, and was not mediated by the effects of the inhibitors on microtubules. Inhibition of dynamin also altered the constitutive secretion of other proteins, decreasing the secretion of fibronectin, matrix metalloproteinase 9, Chitinase-3-like protein 1 and lysozyme but unexpectedly increasing the secretion of the inflammatory mediator cyclophilin A. We conclude that pharmacological inhibitors of dynamin II modulate the constitutive secretion of macrophage apoE as a class effect, and that their capacity to modulate protein secretion may affect a range of biological processes.

Highlights

  • Dynamin II belongs to a family of large GTP-binding proteins involved in membrane fission

  • Inhibition of dynamin inhibits secretion of apolipoprotein exist in stable (Es) (apoE) from primary human macrophages To test whether dynamin inhibition affected the secretion of apoE from primary human macrophages, human monocyte-derived macrophages (HMDM) were exposed to various classes of cell permeable dynamin inhibitors at concentrations found in preliminary experiments to be compatible with normal cell viability

  • This study shows for the first time that pharmacological inhibition of dynamin decreases secretion of apoE and several other constitutively secreted proteins from primary human macrophages

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Summary

Introduction

Dynamin II belongs to a family of large GTP-binding proteins involved in membrane fission. Dynamin proteins contain a number of conserved domains: a GTPase domain for GTP hydrolysis; a pleckstrin homology (PH) domain mediating lipid binding; a GTPase effector domain (GED); a middle domain which together with the GED domain controls self-assembly; and a proline-rich domain (PRD) for interacting with SH3 domain-containing proteins [3]. Due to their role in membrane dynamics, dynamins play an important role in vesicle generation during endocytosis, in mitosis and exit from the Golgi [3,4,5]. Kasai et al found no effect of GTPase-deficient dynamin II mutant K44A (dynIIK44A) on exocytic transport of Cathepsin D and thermoreversible

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