Abstract
Formation of the fusion pore is a central question for regulated exocytosis by which secretory cells release neurotransmitters or hormones. Here, by dynamically monitoring exocytosis of large vesicles (2-7 μM) in astrocytes with two-photon microscopy imaging, we found that the exocytotic fusion pore was generated from the SNARE-dependent fusion at a ring shape of the docked plasma-vesicular membrane and the movement of a fusion-produced membrane fragment. We observed two modes of fragment movements, 1) a shift fragment that shifted to expand the fusion pore and 2) a fall-in fragment that fell into the collapsed vesicle to expand the fusion pore. Shift and fall-in modes are associated with full and partial collapses of large vesicles, respectively. The astrocytic marker, sulforhodamine 101, stained the fusion-produced membrane fragment more brightly than FM 1-43. Sulforhodamine 101 imaging showed that double fusion pores could simultaneously occur in a single vesicle (16% of large vesicles) to accelerate discharge of vesicular contents. Electron microscopy of large astrocytic vesicles showed shift and fall-in membrane fragments. Two modes of fusion pore formation demonstrate a novel mechanism underlying fusion pore expansion and provide a new explanation for full and partial collapses of large secretory vesicles.
Highlights
Astrocytes release glutamate and D-serine by fusion of large vesicles
Exocytotic Fusion of Large Astrocytic Vesicles—Our previous studies have demonstrated that astrocytes release glutamate and D-serine through fusion of large vesicles [25, 32, 33]
We demonstrate that the fusion occurs at a ring shape of the docked membrane microdomain, and the movement of the membrane fragment into vesicles underlies expansion of the exocytotic fusion pore
Summary
Astrocytes release glutamate and D-serine by fusion of large vesicles. Results: Fusion occurs at a ring shape of the docked membrane, and the movement of fusion-produced membrane fragment expands the fusion pore. By dynamically monitoring exocytosis of large vesicles (2–7 m) in astrocytes with two-photon microscopy imaging, we found that the exocytotic fusion pore was generated from the SNARE-dependent fusion at a ring shape of the docked plasma-vesicular membrane and the movement of a fusion-produced membrane fragment. Two modes of fusion pore formation demonstrate a novel mechanism underlying fusion pore expansion and provide a new explanation for full and partial collapses of large secretory vesicles. We further demonstrate that two distinct modes of fusion pore expansion, shift mode and fall-in mode, are associated with full and partial collapses of large astrocytic vesicles.
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.