Abstract

Synaptotagmin I (Syt I), an evolutionarily conserved integral membrane protein of synaptic vesicles, is now known to regulate Ca2+-dependent neurotransmitter release. Syt I protein should undergo several post-translational modifications before maturation and subsequent functioning on synaptic vesicles (e.g. N-glycosylation and fatty acylation in vertebrate Syt I), because the apparent molecular weight of Syt I on synaptic vesicles (mature form, 65,000) was much higher than the calculated molecular weight (47,400) predicted from the cDNA sequences both in vertebrates and invertebrates. Common post-translational modification(s) of Syt I conserved across phylogeny, however, have never been elucidated. In the present study, I discovered that dithreonine residues (Thr-15 and Thr-16) at the intravesicular domain of mouse Syt I are post-translationally modified by a complex form of O-linked sugar (i.e. the addition of sialic acids) in PC12 cells and that the O-glycosylation of Syt I in COS-7 cells depends on the coexpression of vesicle-associated membrane protein-2 (VAMP-2)/synaptobrevin. I also showed that a transmembrane domain of Syt I directly interacts with isolated VAMP-2, but not VAMP-2, in the heterotrimeric SNARE (SNAP receptor) complex (vesicle SNARE, VAMP-2, and two target SNAREs, syntaxin IA and SNAP-25). Since di-Thr or di-Ser residues are often found at the intravesicular domain of invertebrate Syt I, and VAMP-dependent O-glycosylation was also observed in squid Syt expressed in COS-7 cells, I propose that VAMP-dependent O-glycosylation of Syt I is a common modification during evolution and may have important role(s) in synaptic vesicle trafficking.

Highlights

  • Synaptotagmin (Syt)1 belongs to a family of C-terminal type (C-type) tandem C2 proteins, which are thought to regulate membrane traffic

  • I discovered that dithreonine residues (Thr-15 and Thr-16) at the intravesicular domain of mouse Synaptotagmin I (Syt I) are post-translationally modified by a complex form of O-linked sugar in PC12 cells and that the O-glycosylation of Syt I in COS-7 cells depends on the coexpression of vesicle-associated membrane protein-2 (VAMP-2)/synaptobrevin

  • VAMP-2-dependent Post-translational Modification of Synaptotagmin I in COS-7 Cells—In a previous study, I showed that the apparent molecular weight of recombinant mouse synaptotagmin I expressed in COS-7 cells was much smaller than that of endogenous Syt I in the brain or the recombinant Syt I expressed in PC12 cells where Syt I is endogenously expressed abundantly

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

Synaptotagmin; HRP, horseradish peroxidase; VAMP, vesicle-associated membrane protein; GST, glutathione S-transferase. (iii) The C2B domain is suggested to be involved in the fusion step of synaptic vesicles, probably by Ca2ϩ-dependent self-clustering via the C2B domain (22, 38 – 42). (iv) The WHXL motif in the ␤-8 strand of the C2B domain of Syt I is involved in the synaptic vesicle docking step by binding to certain plasma membrane receptors [43]. By using the mammalian coexpression system, I show that the transmembrane domain of Syt I is essential for interaction with vesicle-associated membrane protein-2 (VAMP-2; called synaptobrevin), another synaptic vesicle protein essen-. I discuss the possible roles of Syt I-VAMP-2 interaction and O-glycosylation of Syt I in secretory vesicle trafficking

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