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The acinar epithelial cells of the lacrimal gland exocytose the contents of mature secretory vesicles containing tear proteins at their apical membranes in response to secretagogues. Here we use time-lapse confocal fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching to investigate the changes in actin filaments located beneath the apical membrane during exocytosis evoked by the muscarinic agonist, carbachol (100 μM). Time-lapse confocal fluorescence microscopy of apical actin filaments in reconstituted rabbit lacrimal acini transduced with replication-deficient adenovirus containing GFP-actin revealed a relatively quiescent apical actin array in resting acini. Carbachol markedly increased apical actin filament turnover and also promoted transient actin assembly around apparent fusion intermediates. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching measurements revealed significant (P≤0.05) increases and decreases, respectively, in mobile fraction (Mf) and turnover times (t½) for apical actin filaments in carbachol-stimulated acini relative to untreated acini. The myosin inhibitors, 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM, 10 mM, 15 minutes) and ML-7 (40 μM, 15 minutes), significantly decreased carbachol-stimulated secretion of bulk protein and the exogenous secretory vesicle marker, syncollin-GFP; these agents also promoted accumulation of actin-coated structures which were enriched, in transduced acini, in syncollin-GFP, confirming their identity as fusion intermediates. Actin-coated fusion intermediates were sized consistent with incorporation of multiple rather than single secretory vesicles; moreover, BDM and ML-7 caused a shift towards formation of multiple secretory vesicle aggregates while significantly increasing the diameter of actin-coated fusion intermediates. Our findings suggest that the increased turnover of apical actin filaments and the interaction of actin with non-muscle myosin II assembled around aggregates of secretory vesicles facilitate exocytosis in lacrimal acinar epithelial cells.
mechanisms largely yet uncharacterized. We investigated the role of Rab27b in the terminal release of these secretory vesicles. Confocal fluorescence microscopy analysis of primary cultured rabbit lacrimal gland acinar cells revealed that Rab27b was enriched on the membrane of large subapical vesicles that were significantly colocalized with Rab3D and Myosin 5C. Stimulation of cultured acinar cells with the secretagogue carbachol resulted in apical fusion of these secretory vesicles with the plasma membrane. Evaluation of morphological changes by transmission electron microscopy of lacrimal glands from Rab27b Ϫ/Ϫ and Rab27 ash/ash /Rab27b Ϫ/Ϫ mice, but not ashen mice deficient in Rab27a, showed changes in abundance and organization of secretory vesicles, further confirming a role for this protein in secretory vesicle exocytosis. Glands lacking Rab27b also showed increased lysosomes, damaged mitochondria, and autophagosomelike organelles. In vitro, expression of constitutively active Rab27b increased the average size but retained the subapical distribution of Rab27b-enriched secretory vesicles, whereas dominant-negative Rab27b redistributed this protein from membrane to the cytoplasm. Functional studies measuring release of a cotransduced secretory protein, syncollin-GFP, showed that constitutively active Rab27b enhanced, whereas dominant-negative Rab27b suppressed, stimulated release. Disruption of actin filaments inhibited vesicle fusion to the apical membrane but did not disrupt homotypic fusion. These data show that Rab27b participates in aspects of lacrimal gland acinar cell secretory vesicle formation and release. actin; Rab3d; exocrine secretion; syncollin; mouse models A FUNCTIONING LACRIMAL GLAND (LG) is critical for a healthy ocular surface. This exocrine gland is the primary source of tear proteins and fluid, which, released up on the gland's exposure to sympathetic or parasympathetic agonists provided by innervating nerves, contribute to the middle aqueous layer of the precorneal film. Much of the LG's secretions originate from acinar cells, which constitute over 80% of the mass of the LG (13). These LG acinar cells produce a diverse array of secretory proteins that are internally sorted into large pools of serous and mucous secretory vesicles (SV) sized ϳ1 m in diameter and stored beneath the apical plasma membrane (APM) in preparation for regulated exocytosis. SV contents include nutrients and growth factors (lacritin and EGF), antibacterial and antiviral factors (secretory IgA and lactoferrin), and an array of proteases and lysosomal hydrolases (10, 39, 47). Despite its physiological importance, however, few studies have focused on the mechanisms of secretory membrane trafficking in LG acinar cells, in part due to the fragility and heterogeneity of these LG acinar SV relative to those in other acinar secretory cells, e.g., pancreatic acini (7).The current schematic of exocytosis in the LG acinar cell suggests multiple participants. Mature LG acinar cell SV localize beneath an actin-rich network und...
Marchelletta RR, Jacobs DT, Schechter JE, Cheney RE, Hamm-Alvarez SF. The class V myosin motor, myosin 5c, localizes to mature secretory vesicles and facilitates exocytosis in lacrimal acini. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 295: C13-C28, 2008. First published April 23, 2008 doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00330.2007.-We investigated the role of the actin-based myosin motor, myosin 5c (Myo5c) in vesicle transport in exocrine secretion. Lacrimal gland acinar cells (LGAC) are the major source for the regulated secretion of proteins from the lacrimal gland into the tear film. Confocal fluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy revealed that Myo5c was associated with secretory vesicles in primary rabbit LGAC. Upon stimulation of secretion with the muscarinic agonist, carbachol, Myo5c was also detected in association with actin-coated fusion intermediates. Adenovirus-mediated expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP) fused to the tail domain of Myo5c (Ad-GFP-Myo5c-tail) showed that this protein was localized to secretory vesicles. Furthermore, its expression induced a significant (P Յ 0.05) decrease in carbachol-stimulated release of two secretory vesicle content markers, secretory component and syncollin-GFP. Adenovirus-mediated expression of GFP appended to the full-length Myo5c (Ad-GFP-Myo5c-full) was used in parallel with adenovirus-mediated expression of GFP-Myo5c-tail in LGAC to compare various parameters of secretory vesicles labeled with either GFP-labeled protein in resting and stimulated LGAC. These studies revealed that the carbachol-stimulated increase in secretory vesicle diameter associated with compound fusion of secretory vesicles that was also exhibited by vesicles labeled with GFP-Myo5c-full was impaired in vesicles labeled with GFP-Myo5c-tail. A significant decrease in GFP labeling of actin-coated fusion intermediates was also seen in carbachol-stimulated LGAC transduced with GFPMyo5c-tail relative to LGAC transduced with GFP-Myo5c-full. These results suggest that Myo5c participates in apical exocytosis of secretory vesicles.actin; lacrimal gland; tear film THE LACRIMAL GLAND (LG) is the principal source of proteins released into the tear film. These proteins play critical roles in protection of the ocular surface from pathogens and also provide nutrients and growth factors essential for maintenance of the cornea (3, 50). The lacrimal gland acinar cells (LGAC) constitute ϳ85% of the LG and are largely responsible for this regulated secretion of tear proteins including secretory immunoglobulin A (sIgA), secretory component (SC), lysosomal hydrolases, and growth factors, among others (50). The development of decreased LG output occurs in individuals with syndromes ranging in severity from mild dry eye to the autoimmune disorder,
In this article, we investigate the contributions of actin filaments and accessory proteins to apical clathrin-mediated endocytosis in primary rabbit lacrimal acini. Confocal fluorescence and electron microscopy revealed that cytochalasin D promoted apical accumulation of clathrin, alpha-adaptin, dynamin, and F-actin and increased the amounts of coated pits and vesicles at the apical plasma membrane. Sorbitol density gradient analysis of membrane compartments showed that cytochalasin D increased [14C]dextran association with apical membranes from stimulated acini, consistent with functional inhibition of apical endocytosis. Recombinant syndapin SH3 domains interacted with lacrimal acinar dynamin, neuronal Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome protein (N-WASP), and synaptojanin; their introduction by electroporation elicited remarkable accumulation of clathrin, accessory proteins, and coated pits at the apical plasma membrane. These SH3 domains also significantly (p = 0.05) increased F-actin, with substantial colocalization of dynamin and N-WASP with the additional filaments. Coelectroporation with the VCA domain of N-WASP blocked the increase in F-actin and reversed the morphological changes indicative of impaired apical endocytosis. We suggest that transient modulation of actin polymerization by syndapins through activation of the Arp2/3 complex via N-WASP coordinates dynamin-mediated vesicle fission at the apical plasma membrane of acinar epithelia. Trapping of assembled F-actin intermediates during this process by cytochalasin D or syndapin SH3 domains impairs endocytosis.
The lacrimal glands of male NOD mice exhibit many of the features of the human lacrimal gland in patients afflicted with the autoimmune disease, Sjögren's syndrome, including loss of secretory functions and lymphocytic infiltration into the lacrimal gland. To elucidate the early changes in the secretory pathway associated with development of Sjögren's syndrome, we investigated the organization of the exocytotic pathway in lacrimal glands of age-matched male BALB/c and NOD mice. Cryosections from lacrimal glands from 1 and 4 month male BALB/c and NOD mice were processed for confocal fluorescence and electron microscopic evaluation of different participants in exocytosis. No changes in apical actin filaments were noted in glands from NOD mice, but these glands exhibited thickening of basolateral actin relative to that seen in the BALB/c mice. Rab3D immunofluorescence associated with mature secretory vesicles was distributed abundantly in a continuous vesicular network concentrated beneath the apical plasma membrane in glands from 1 and 4 month BALB/c mice. In glands from 1 month NOD mice, rab3D immunofluorescence exhibited marked discontinuity and irregularity in the vesicular labeling pattern. While this change was also detected in glands from 4 month NOD mice, many of these glands exhibited an additional extension of rab3D labeling through the cell to the basolateral membrane. Electron microscopic analysis confirmed the formation of irregularly-shaped, unusually large secretory vesicles in lacrimal glands from NOD mice. Quantitation of multiple secretory vesicles from electron micrographs revealed a significant (p ≤5) increase in the percentage of secretory vesicles incorporated into multivesicular aggregates in lacrimal glands from 1 and 4 month NOD mice compared to BALB/c mice. The M3 muscarinic receptor, a key signaling effector of exocytosis, was redistributed away from its normally basolateral locale in glands from BALB/c mice, with concomitant enrichment in intracellular aggregates in glands from NOD mice. These findings show that lacrimal glands in NOD mice as young as 1 month contain aberrant secretory vesicles with altered effector composition that undergo premature cytoplasmic fusion, and that changes in the distribution of the M3 muscarinic receptor occur within the same time frame.
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