Abstract

Key synaptic proteins from the soluble SNARE (N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor) family, among many others, are organized at the plasma membrane of cells as clusters containing dozens to hundreds of protein copies. However, the exact membranal distribution of proteins into clusters or as single molecules, the organization of molecules inside the clusters, and the clustering mechanisms are unclear due to limitations of the imaging and analytical tools. Focusing on syntaxin 1 and SNAP-25, we implemented direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy together with quantitative clustering algorithms to demonstrate a novel approach to explore the distribution of clustered and nonclustered molecules at the membrane of PC12 cells with single-molecule precision. Direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy images reveal, for the first time, solitary syntaxin/SNAP-25 molecules and small clusters as well as larger clusters. The nonclustered syntaxin or SNAP-25 molecules are mostly concentrated in areas adjacent to their own clusters. In the clusters, the density of the molecules gradually decreases from the dense cluster core to the periphery. We further detected large clusters that contain several density gradients. This suggests that some of the clusters are formed by unification of several clusters that preserve their original organization or reorganize into a single unit. Although syntaxin and SNAP-25 share some common distributional features, their clusters differ markedly from each other. SNAP-25 clusters are significantly larger, more elliptical, and less dense. Finally, this study establishes methodological tools for the analysis of single-molecule-based super-resolution imaging data and paves the way for revealing new levels of membranal protein organization.

Highlights

  • Syntaxin forms nano-sized clusters at the plasma membrane whose inner organization is unknown

  • Izations and 528 SNAP-25 clusters, we found that 68% of SNAP-25 molecules fall into clusters that are much larger as compared with those of syntaxin

  • More SNAP-25 clusters share a border with other SNAP-25 clusters

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Summary

Introduction

Syntaxin forms nano-sized clusters at the plasma membrane whose inner organization is unknown. As suggested by Rickman et al [34], it can interact with syntaxin molecules that reside in less dense areas of the clusters, or around them, to form syntaxin-SNAP-25 complexes within and around syntaxin clusters.

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