Abstract

The abundance and functional activity of proteins involved in the formation of the SNARE complex are tightly regulated for efficient exocytosis. Tomosyn proteins are negative regulators of exocytosis. Tomosyn causes an attenuation of insulin secretion by limiting the formation of the SNARE complex. We hypothesized that glucose-dependent stimulation of insulin secretion from β-cells must involve reversing the inhibitory action of tomosyn. Here, we show that glucose increases tomosyn protein turnover. Within 1 h of exposure to 15 mM glucose, ~50% of tomosyn was degraded. The degradation of tomosyn in response to high glucose was blocked by inhibitors of the proteasomal pathway. Using (32)P labeling and mass spectrometry, we showed that tomosyn-2 is phosphorylated in response to high glucose, phorbol esters, and analogs of cAMP, all key insulin secretagogues. We identified 11 phosphorylation sites in tomosyn-2. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate phosphomimetic (Ser → Asp) and loss-of-function (Ser → Ala) mutants. The Ser → Asp mutant had enhanced protein turnover compared with the Ser → Ala mutant and wild type tomosyn-2. Additionally, the Ser → Asp tomosyn-2 mutant was ineffective at inhibiting insulin secretion. Using a proteomic screen for tomosyn-2-binding proteins, we identified Hrd-1, an E3-ubiquitin ligase. We showed that tomosyn-2 ubiquitination is increased by Hrd-1, and knockdown of Hrd-1 by short hairpin RNA resulted in increased abundance in tomosyn-2 protein levels. Taken together, our results reveal a mechanism by which enhanced phosphorylation of a negative regulator of secretion, tomosyn-2, in response to insulin secretagogues targets it to degradation by the Hrd-1 E3-ubiquitin ligase.

Highlights

  • Tomosyn-2 is an inhibitor of insulin secretion

  • Glucose Increases Tomosyn Protein Turnover—We tested the ability of tomosyn-2 to inhibit insulin secretion from human islets

  • The presence of an inhibitor of insulin secretion in ␤-cells requires a mechanism for insulin secretagogues to block this inhibitory action

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Summary

Background

Tomosyn-2 is an inhibitor of insulin secretion. Results: Glucose induces phosphorylation, ubiquitination, and degradation of tomosyn-2. Our results reveal a mechanism by which enhanced phosphorylation of a negative regulator of secretion, tomosyn-2, in response to insulin secretagogues targets it to degradation by the Hrd-1 E3-ubiquitin ligase. Their inhibitory effect on exocytosis was attributed to the C-terminal R-SNARE domain. An N-terminal region deletion mutant of tomosyn-1 was able to bind syntaxin-1A but lacked the ability to inhibit exocytosis [16]. Williams et al [18] demonstrated that fragments containing loop 1 (537–578 amino acids) or loop 3 (933–955 amino acids) deletions in the N-terminal region of tomosyn-1 were able to bind syntaxin-1A by the R-SNARE domain but failed to inhibit exocytosis. We identify phosphorylation sites in tomosyn-2 that respond to insulin secretagogues and an E3-ubiquitin ligase that targets tomosyn-2 for degradation

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
D Tomosyn-2-V5 GFP WT SASDα-V5
DISCUSSION
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