Substantial efforts have recently been made to demonstrate the importance of lipids and lipid-modifying enzymes in various membrane trafficking processes, including calcium-regulated exocytosis of hormones and neurotransmitters. Among bioactive lipids, phosphatidic acid (PA) is an attractive candidate to promote membrane fusion through its ability to change membrane topology. To date, however, the biosynthetic pathway, the dynamic location, and actual function of PA in secretory cells remain unknown. Using a short interference RNA strategy on chromaffin and PC12 cells, we demonstrate here that phospholipase D1 is activated in secretagogue-stimulated cells and that it produces PA at the plasma membrane at the secretory granule docking sites. We show that phospholipase D1 activation and PA production represent key events in the exocytotic progression. Membrane capacitance measurements indicate that reduction of endogenous PA impairs the formation of fusion-competent granules. Finally, we show that the PLD1 short interference RNAmediated inhibition of exocytosis can be rescued by exogenous provision of a lipid that favors the transition of opposed bi-layer membranes to hemifused membranes having the outer leaflets fused. Our findings demonstrate that PA synthesis is required during exocytosis to facilitate a late event in the granule fusion pathway. We propose that the underlying mechanism is related to the ability of PA to alter membrane curvature and promote hemi-fusion. Phosphatidic acid (PA)2 is a pleiotropic bioactive lipid that has been proposed to activate selected enzymes (1), recruit proteins to membrane surfaces (2), and serve as a substrate for the formation of other signaling lipids (3). Most intriguingly, PA has also been shown to promote negative curvature in bi-layer membranes due to its small polar head-group in combination with two fatty-acyl side chains (4). The bulk of cellular PA is synthesized via two different acylation pathways, the glycerol 3-phosphate pathway and the dihydroxy acetone phosphate pathway, which are named according to their respective precursors. However, PA is also produced via hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine by phospholipase D (PLD) (5) on a much faster time scale, and this latter source is thought to underlie the dynamic regulation of PA that allows it to function as a signaling lipid in agonist-stimulated cell biological responses such as secretion and changes in cellular morphology.In mammals, the classic PLD family is composed of a pair of membrane-associated proteins, PLD1 and PLD2. Both PLD isoforms require phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate for their enzymatic activity. However, whereas PLD2 exhibits relatively high basal activity in isolation, full activation of PLD1 requires its stimulation by small GTPases of the ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF), Rho and Ral families, and protein kinase C (3, 6). PLD enzymes have been proposed to be involved in a number of cellular processes, including cell growth and survival, cell differentiation, and vesicular trafficking (3)....
The influence of surface roughness and the presence of adhesion molecules in the culture medium were studied regarding cell adhesion, shape, and proliferation of osteoblast-like cells grown on two types of titanium disk. Type I disks were acid etched and type II disks were sandblasted and acid etched. Surface roughness was determined by contact profilometry and scanning electron microscopy. Chemical composition and oxide thickness of the superficial titanium layer were established with energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry, electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis and auger electron spectroscopy. Titanium release in the culture medium was assessed by inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometry. Osteoblast-like cells (Saos-2) were cultured on both types of titanium disks (1) in standard conditions (DMEM culture medium supplemented with fetal calf serum), (FCS), (2) with the culture medium alone (DMEM alone), (3) in the presence of fibronectin or vitronectin (DMEM supplemented with fibronectin or vitronectin). Cultures were also performed in the presence of monoclonal anti-integrin (beta1, alphav) to test the cell adhesion molecules involved in the cell binding to the titanium surface. We found that sandblasting does not modify the chemical surface composition and that titanium represents only 5-6% (in the atom percentage) of surface elements. Release of titanium in the culture medium was found to increase from 24 to 72 hours. In the absence of FCS, fibronectin, or vitronectin, cells appeared scanty and packed in clusters. On the contrary, cells cultured in the presence of FCS, fibronectin, or vitronectin were flattened with large and thin cytoplasmic expansions. The addition of anti beta1 or alphav integrin subunit monoclonal antibody in the culture medium decreased adhesion and spreading of cells, particularly in the presence of fibronectin. Cell proliferation was significantly higher on culture plastic than on both types of disks, but was increased on rough but not on smooth surfaces. These results indicate that a high surface roughness and presence of fibronectin or vitronectin are critical elements for adhesion, spreading, and proliferation of cells on titanium surfaces.
Glial cells release molecules that influence brain development, function, and disease. Calcium-dependent exocytosis has been proposed as potential release mechanism in astroglia, but the physiological relevance of "gliotransmission" in vivo remains controversial. We focused on the impact of glial exocytosis on sensory transduction in the retina. To this end, we generated transgenic mice to block exocytosis by Cre recombinase-dependent expression of the clostridial botulinum neurotoxin serotype B light chain, which cleaves vesicle-associated membrane protein 1-3. Ubiquitous and neuronal toxin expression caused perinatal lethality and a reduction of synaptic transmission thus validating transgene function. Toxin expression in Müller cells inhibited vesicular glutamate release and impaired glial volume regulation but left retinal histology and visual processing unaffected. Our model to study gliotransmission in vivo reveals specific functions of exocytotic glutamate release in retinal glia.
In neuroendocrine cells, annexin-A2 is implicated as a promoter of monosialotetrahexosylganglioside (GM1)-containing lipid microdomains that are required for calcium-regulated exocytosis. As soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptors (SNAREs) require a specific lipid environment to mediate granule docking and fusion, we investigated whether annexin-A2-induced lipid microdomains might be linked to the SNAREs present at the plasma membrane. Stimulation of adrenergic chromaffin cells induces the translocation of cytosolic annexin-A2 to the plasma membrane, where it colocalizes with SNAP-25 and S100A10. Crosslinking experiments performed in stimulated chromaffin cells indicate that annexin-A2 directly interacts with S100A10 to form a tetramer at the plasma membrane. Here, we demonstrate that S100A10 can interact with vesicle-associated membrane protein 2 (VAMP2) and show that VAMP2 is present at the plasma membrane in resting adrenergic chromaffin cells. Tetanus toxin that cleaves VAMP2 solubilizes S100A10 from the plasma membrane and inhibits the translocation of annexin-A2 to the plasma membrane. Immunogold labelling of plasma membrane sheets combined with spatial point pattern analysis confirmed that S100A10 is present in VAMP2 microdomains at the plasma membrane and that annexin-A2 is observed close to S100A10 and to syntaxin in stimulated chromaffin cells. In addition, these results showed that the formation of phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate (PIP 2 ) microdomains colocalized with S100A10 in the vicinity of docked granules, suggesting a functional interplay between annexin-A2-mediated lipid microdomains and SNAREs during exocytosis.
Annexin A2 and the actin cytoskeleton are essential partners in providing lipid platforms for granule recruitment and fusion during exocytosis.
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