Abstract

Assembly of the SNARE complex is an essential step for membrane fusion and neurotransmitter release in neurons. The plasma membrane SNAREs syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25 (t-SNAREs) and the delivery-vesicle SNARE VAMP2 (or v-SNARE) contain the "SNARE regions" that essentially mediate SNARE pairing. Using site-directed spin labeling and EPR distance measurement we show that two identical copies of the SNARE region from syntaxin 1A intertwine as a coiled coil near the "ionic layer" region. The structure of the t-SNARE complex appears to be virtually identical to that of the ternary SNARE complex, except that VAMP2 is substituted to the second copy of syntaxin 1A. Furthermore, it appears that the coiled coil structure is maintained up to residue 259 of syntaxin 1A, identical to that of the ternary complex. These results are somewhat contradictory to the previous reports, suggesting that the t-SNARE complex has the disordered midsection (Xiao, W. Z., Poirier, M. A., Bennett, M. K., and Shin, Y. K. (2001) Nat. Struc. Biol. 8, 308-311) and the uncoiled C-terminal region (Margittai, M., Fasshauer, D., Pabst, S., Jahn, R., and Langen, R. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 13169-13177). The newly refined structure of the t-SNARE complex provides a basis for the better understanding of the SNARE assembly process. It also provides possible structural-functional clues to the membrane fusion in the v-SNARE deleted fusion models.

Highlights

  • Intermediate for the SNARE complex assembly [4]

  • The t-SNARE complex appears to be structurally similar to the ternary complex; syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25 assemble into a parallel four-helix bundle that consists of two copies of the syntaxin 1A H3 domain and the two helical domains of SNAP-25

  • We found that all spin-labeled syntaxin 1A mutants were capable of forming the binary t-SNARE complex

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Summary

Introduction

Intermediate for the SNARE complex assembly [4]. Upon docking of the vesicle to the plasma membrane vesicle (v-) SNARE VAMP2 interacts with the t-SNARE complex to form a stable SNARE complex that perhaps leads to, or catalyzes, the fusion of two membranes. Using site-directed spin labeling and EPR distance measurement we show that two identical copies of the SNARE region from syntaxin 1A intertwine as a coiled coil near the “ionic layer” region. The t-SNARE complex appears to be structurally similar to the ternary complex; syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25 assemble into a parallel four-helix bundle that consists of two copies of the syntaxin 1A H3 domain and the two helical domains of SNAP-25.

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