Abstract. Recent experiments using DNA transfection have shown that secretory proteins in AtT-20 cells are sorted into two biochemicaUy distinct secretory pathways. These two pathways differ in the temporal regulation of exocytosis. Proteins secreted by the regulated pathway are stored in dense-core granules until release is stimulated by secretagogues. In contrast, proteins secreted by the constitutive pathway are exported continuously, without storage. It is not known whether there are mechanisms to segregate regulated and constitutive secretory vesicles spatially. In this study, we examined the site of insertion of constitutive vesicles and compared it with that of regulated secretory granules. Regulated granules accumulate at tips of processes in these cells. To determine whether constitutively externalized membrane proteins are inserted into plasma membrane at the cell body or at process tips, AtT-20 cells were infected with ts-O45, a temperature-sensitive mutant of vesicular stomatitis virus in which transport of the surface glycoprotein G is conditionally blocked in 'the ER. After switching to the permissive temperature, insertion of G protein was detected at the cell body, not at process tips. Targeting of constitutive and regulated secretory vesicles to distinct areas of the plasma membrane appears to be mediated by microtubules. We found that while disruption of microtubules by colchicine had no effect on constitutive secretion, it completely blocked the accumulation of regulated granules at special release sites. Colchicine also affected the proper packaging of regulated secretory proteins. We conclude that regulated and constitutive secretory vesicles are targeted to different areas of the plasma membrane, most probably by differential interactions with microtubules. These results imply that regulated secretory granules may have unique membrane receptors for selective attachment to microtubules.
The surfaces on which neurons grow greatly affect neurite elongation, but it is unclear how substrates influence the events within the growth cone that bring about elongation. Neurite elongation by Aplysia californica neurons in culture occurs through a series of transformations of the structures of the growth cone (Goldberg and Burmeister, J. Cell Biol., 103:1921-1931, 1986). The growth cone produces actin-rich protrusions, veils, and lamellipodia, which can then mature into the central body of the growth cone through the net advance of microtubules and membranous organelles from contiguous central regions, a process called "engorgement." Aplysia neurons form growth cones on poly-l-lysine-treated substrates, but their rate of neurite elongation is greatly enhanced on substrates additionally exposed to Aplysia hemolymph. The acute application of hemolymph to slowly growing neurites brings about a rapid acceleration of neurite elongation and engorgement. The enhancement of engorgement was effected with material eluted from hemolymph-treated substrates and was not seen when hemolymph was added to neurons cultured on hemolymph-treated substrates inactivated by exposure to UV radiation. Thus, we conclude that the rapid acceleration of engorgement caused by hemolymph is, in large part, a substrate-mediated effect. We propose that extracellular substrate molecules can modulate the rate of neurite growth through the regulation of the engorgement of lamellipodia. The microtubule disrupters colcemid and nocodazole inhibit the advance of vesicular elements into the lamellipodia following hemolymph treatment, but taxol, which promotes the polymerization and stabilization of microtubules, does not itself enhance engorgement. The microfilament disrupter cytochalasin B, however, stimulates engorgement. Our results suggest that regulating the resistance of the peripheral actin meshwork to penetration by microtubules and vesicles may be a mechanism by which substrate-attached molecules regulate neurite advance.
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