Kiss-and-run exocytosis, consisting of reversible fusion between the vesicle membrane and the plasma membrane, is considered to lead to full fusion after stimulation of vesicles containing classical transmitters. However, whether this is also the case in the fusion of peptidergic vesicles is unknown.Previously, we have observed that spontaneous neuropeptide discharge from a single vesicle is slower than stimulated release, because of the kinetic constraints of fusion pore opening. To explore whether slow spontaneous release also reflects a relatively narrow fusion pore, we analyzed the permeation of FM 4-64 dye and HEPES molecules through spontaneously forming fusion pores in lactotroph vesicles expressing synaptopHluorin, a pH-dependent fluorescent fusion marker. Confocal imaging showed that half of the spontaneous exocytotic events exhibited fusion pore openings associated with a change in synaptopHluorin fluorescence but were impermeable to FM 4-64 and HEPES. Together with membrane capacitance measurements, these findings indicate an open fusion pore diameter Ͻ0.5 nm, much smaller than the neuropeptides. In stimulated cells, Ͼ70% of exocytotic events exhibited a larger, FM 4-64-permeable pore (Ͼ1 nm). Interestingly, capacitance measurements showed that the majority of exocytotic events in spontaneous and stimulated conditions were transient. Stimulation increased the frequency of transient events and the fusion pore dwell time but decreased the fraction of events with lowest measurable fusion pore.Kiss-and-run is the predominant mode of exocytosis in resting and in stimulated peptidergic vesicles. Stimulation prolongs the effective opening of the fusion pore and expands its primary subnanometer diameter to enable hormone secretion without full fusion.
Astrocytes appear to communicate with each other as well as with neurons via ATP. However, the mechanisms of ATP release are controversial. To explore whether stimuli that increase [Ca 2؉ ] i also trigger vesicular ATP release from astrocytes, we labeled ATP-containing vesicles with the fluorescent dye quinacrine, which exhibited a significant co-localization with atrial natriuretic peptide. The confocal microscopy study revealed that quinacrine-loaded vesicles displayed mainly non-directional spontaneous mobility with relatively short track lengths and small maximal displacements, whereas 4% of vesicles exhibited directional mobility. After ionomycin stimulation only non-directional vesicle mobility could be observed, indicating that an increase in [Ca 2؉ ] i attenuated vesicle mobility. Total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) imaging in combination with epifluorescence showed that a high percentage of fluorescently labeled vesicles underwent fusion with the plasma membrane after stimulation with glutamate or ionomycin and that this event was Ca 2؉ -dependent. This was confirmed by patchclamp studies on HEK-293T cells transfected with P2X 3 receptor, used as sniffers for ATP release from astrocytes. Glutamate stimulation of astrocytes was followed by an increase in the incidence of small transient inward currents in sniffers, reminiscent of postsynaptic quantal events observed at synapses. Their incidence was highly dependent on extracellular Ca 2؉ . Collectively, these findings indicate that glutamate-stimulated ATP release from astrocytes was most likely exocytotic and that after stimulation the fraction of quinacrine-loaded vesicles, spontaneously exhibiting directional mobility, disappeared.Many recent studies demonstrate that astrocytes play a significant modulatory role in synaptic physiology (1-4). Astrocytes respond to neurotransmitters, integrate different inputs, and signal back to neurons or forward information to neighboring or more distant astrocytes (2). In response to stimulation they release several chemical substances (5-7), termed gliotransmitters, which can interfere with the neuronal communicating pathways (8 -10).One major extracellular messenger important for coordinating the function of astrocytes, as well as for the cross-talk between them and other cell types, is ATP (11). Whereas several lines of evidence support the idea of ATP release from astrocytes (12-14), the release mechanisms are not completely understood. Some studies have described a connexin hemichannel-mediated release (12, 15, 16) in both resting and activated conditions. Other possible mechanisms, like volume-regulated anion channels (17, 18) and ATP-binding cassette transporters (multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (19), or cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (20) have also been reported. On the contrary, only few studies have focused on the possibility of exocytotic, vesicular ATP release mechanism operating in astrocytes (13, 14), even though it has been shown that astrocytes express the element...
PKH lipophilic dyes are highly fluorescent and stain membranes by intercalating their aliphatic portion into the exposed lipid bilayer. They have established use in labeling and tracking of cells in vivo and in vitro. Despite wide use of PKH-labeled extracellular vesicles (EVs) in cell targeting and functional studies, nonEV-associated fluorescent structures have never been examined systematically, nor was their internalization by cells. Here, we have characterized PKH26-positive particles in lymphoblastoid B exosome samples and exosome-free controls stained by ultracentrifugation, filtration, and sucrose-cushion-based and sucrose-gradient-based procedures, using confocal imaging and asymmetric-flow field-flow fractionation coupled to multi-angle light-scattering detector analysis. We show for the first time that numerous PKH26 nanoparticles (nine out of ten PKH26-positive particles) are formed during ultracentrifugation-based exosome staining, which are almost indistinguishable from PKH26-labeled exosomes in terms of size, surface area, and fluorescence intensity. When PKH26-labeled exosomes were purified through sucrose, PKH26 nanoparticles were differentiated from PKH26-labeled exosomes based on their reduced size. However, PKH26 nanoparticles were only physically removed from PKH26-labeled exosomes when separated on a sucrose gradient, and at the expense of low PKH26-labeled exosome recovery. Overall, low PKH26-positive particle recovery is characteristic of filtration-based exosome staining. Importantly, PKH26 nanoparticles are internalized by primary astrocytes into similar subcellular compartments as PKH26-labeled exosomes. Altogether, PKH26 nanoparticles can result in false-positive signals for stained EVs that can compromise the interpretation of EV internalization. Thus, for use in EV uptake and functional studies, sucrose-gradient-based isolation should be the method of choice to obtain PKH26-labeled exosomes devoid of PKH26 nanoparticles.
Astrocytes, a subtype of glial cells, have numerous characteristics that were previously considered exclusive for neurons. One of these characteristics is a cytosolic [Ca2+] oscillation that controls the release of the chemical transmitter glutamate and atrial natriuretic peptide. These chemical messengers appear to be released from astrocytes via Ca(2+)-dependent exocytosis. In the present study, patch-clamp membrane capacitance measurements were used to monitor changes in the membrane area of a single astrocyte, while the photolysis of caged calcium compounds by a UV flash was used to elicit steps in [Ca2+]i to determine the exocytotic properties of astrocytes. Experiments show that astrocytes exhibit Ca(2+)-dependent increases in membrane capacitance, with an apparent Kd value of approximately 20 microM [Ca2+]i. The delay between the flash delivery and the peak rate in membrane capacitance increase is in the range of tens to hundreds of milliseconds. The pretreatment of astrocytes by the tetanus neurotoxin, which specifically cleaves the neuronal/neuroendocrine type of SNARE protein synaptobrevin, abolished flash-induced membrane capacitance increases, suggesting that Ca(2+)-dependent membrane capacitance changes involve tetanus neurotoxin-sensitive SNARE-mediated vesicular exocytosis. Immunocytochemical experiments show distinct populations of vesicles containing glutamate and atrial natriuretic peptide in astrocytes. We conclude that the recorded Ca(2+)-dependent changes in membrane capacitance represent regulated exocytosis from multiple types of vesicles, about 100 times slower than the exocytotic response in neurons.
Hormones are released from cells by passing through an exocytotic pore that forms after vesicle and plasma membrane fusion. In stimulated exocytosis vesicle content is discharged swiftly. Although rapid vesicle discharge has also been proposed to mediate basal secretion, this has not been studied directly. We investigated basal hormone release by preloading fluorescent peptides into single vesicles. The hormone discharge, monitored with confocal microscopy, was compared with the simultaneous loading of vesicle by FM styryl dye. In stimulated vesicles FM 4-64 (4 microM), loading and hormone discharge occurs within seconds. In contrast, in approximately 50% of spontaneously releasing vesicles, the vesicle content discharge and the FM 4-64 loading were slow (approximately 3 min). These results show that in peptide secreting neuroendocrine cells the elementary vesicle content discharge differs in basal and in stimulated exocytosis. It is proposed that the view dating back for some decades, which is that, at rest, the vesicle discharge of hormones and neurotransmitters is similar to that occurring after stimulation, needs to be extended. In addition to the classical paradigm that secretory capacity of a cell is determined by controlling the probability of occurrence of elementary exocytotic events, one will have to consider activity modulation of elementary exocytotic events as well.
Adult neurogenesis is regulated by a number of cellular players within the neurogenic niche. Astrocytes participate actively in brain development, regulation of the mature central nervous system (CNS), and brain plasticity. They are important regulators of the local environment in adult neurogenic niches through the secretion of diffusible morphogenic factors, such as Wnts. Astrocytes control the neurogenic niche also through membrane-associated factors, however, the identity of these factors and the mechanisms involved are largely unknown. In this study, we sought to determine the mechanisms underlying our earlier finding of increased neuronal differentiation of neural progenitor cells when cocultured with astrocytes lacking glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and vimentin (GFAP 2/2 Vim 2/2 ). We used primary astrocyte and neurosphere cocultures to demonstrate that astrocytes inhibit neuronal differentiation through a cell-cell contact. GFAP 2/2 Vim 2/2 astrocytes showed reduced endocytosis of Notch ligand Jagged1, reduced Notch signaling, and increased neuronal differentiation of neurosphere cultures. This effect of GFAP 2/2 Vim 2/2 astrocytes was abrogated in the presence of immobilized Jagged1 in a manner dependent on the activity of c-secretase. Finally, we used GFAP 2/2 Vim 2/2 mice to show that in the absence of GFAP and vimentin, hippocampal neurogenesis under basal conditions as well as after injury is increased. We conclude that astrocytes negatively regulate neurogenesis through the Notch pathway, and endocytosis of Notch ligand Jagged1 in astrocytes and Notch signaling from astrocytes to neural stem/progenitor cells depends on the intermediate filament proteins GFAP and vimentin.
It is believed that in regulated exocytosis the vesicle membrane fuses with the plasma membrane in response to a physiological stimulus. However, in the absence of stimulation, repetitive transient fusion events are also observed, reflecting a stable state. The mechanisms by which the initial fusion pore attains stability are poorly understood. We modelled energetic stability of the fusion pore by taking into account the anisotropic, intrinsic shape of the membrane constituents and their in-plane ordering in the local curvature of the membrane. We used cell-attached membrane capacitance techniques to monitor the appearance and conductance of single fusion pore events in cultured rat lactotrophs. The results revealed a bell-shaped distribution of the fusion pore conductance with a modal value of 25 pS. The experimentally observed increase of the fusion pore stability with decreasing fusion pore radius agrees well with the theoretical predictions. Moreover, the results revealed a correlation between the amplitude of transient capacitance increases and the fusion pore conductance, indicating that larger vesicles may attain a stable fusion pore with larger fusion pore diameters.
Intermediate filament (IF) proteins upregulation is a hallmark of astrocyte activation and reactive gliosis, but its pathophysiological implications remain incompletely understood. A recently reported association between IFs and directional mobility of peptidergic vesicles allows us to hypothesize that IFs affect vesicle dynamics and exocytosis-mediated astrocyte communication with neighboring cells. Here, we ask whether the trafficking of recycling vesicles (i.e., those fused to and then retrieved from the plasma membrane) and endosomes/lysosomes depends on IFs. Recycling vesicles were labeled by antibodies against vesicle glutamate transporter 1 (VGLUT1) and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), respectively, and by lysotracker, which labels endosomes/lysosomes. Quantitative fluorescence microscopy was used to monitor the mobility of labeled vesicles in astrocytes, derived from either wild-type (WT) mice or mice deficient in glial fibrillary acidic protein and vimentin (GFAP(-/-)Vim(-/-)), the latter lacking astrocyte IFs. Stimulation with ionomycin or ATP enhanced the mobility of VGLUT1-positive vesicles and reduced the mobility of ANP-positive vesicles in WT astrocytes. In GFAP(-/-)Vim(-/-) astrocytes, both vesicle types responded to stimulation, but the relative increase in mobility of VGLUT1-positive vesicles was more prominent compared with nonstimulated cells, whereas the stimulation-dependent attenuation of ANP-positive vesicles mobility was reduced compared with nonstimulated cells. The mobility of endosomes/lysosomes decreased following stimulation in WT astrocytes. However, in GFAP(-/-)Vim(-/-) astrocytes, a small increase in the mobility of endosomes/lysosomes was observed. These findings show that astrocyte IFs differentially affect the stimulation-dependent mobility of vesicles. We propose that upregulation of IFs in pathologic states may alter the function of astrocytes by deregulating vesicle trafficking.
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