SV2A and SV2C are not vesicular Ca super(2+) transporters but control glucose-evoked granule recruitment
Synaptic vesicle protein 2 (SV2) is expressed in neuroendocrine cells as three homologous isoforms, SV2A, SV2B and SV2C. Ca super(2+)-dependent function in exocytosis has been attributed to SV2A and SV2B, without elucidation of the mechanism. The role of SV2C has not yet been addressed. Here we char...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of cell science 2005-12, Vol.118 (23), p.5647-5660 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Synaptic vesicle protein 2 (SV2) is expressed in neuroendocrine cells as three homologous isoforms, SV2A, SV2B and SV2C. Ca super(2+)-dependent function in exocytosis has been attributed to SV2A and SV2B, without elucidation of the mechanism. The role of SV2C has not yet been addressed. Here we characterize the three SV2 isoforms and define their involvement in regulated insulin secretion. SV2A and SV2C are associated with insulin-containing granules and synaptic-like-microvesicles (SLM) in INS-1E insulinoma and primary {szligbeta}-cells, whereas SV2B is only present on SLM. Neither overexpression nor isoform-specific silencing of SV2A or SV2C by RNA interference modifies depolarization-triggered cytosolic [Ca super(2+)] rises or secretory granule [Ca super(2+)], measured with a VAMP-2 aequorin chimera. This strongly argues against any Ca super(2+) transport function of SV2. Moreover, up- or downregulation of these isoforms has no influence on K super(+)-induced insulin release suggesting that SV2 does not affect the Ca super(2+)-dependent step(s) of exocytosis. By contrast, glucose-elicited secretion is inhibited during the sustained rather than the early phase, placing the action of SV2 on the recruitment of granules from the reserve pool to the plasma membrane. This conclusion is reinforced by capacitance measurements in glucose-stimulated SV2C-deficient cells. Like capacitance, evoked and basal hormone release are attenuated more by silencing of SV2C compared with SV2A. This indicates only partial redundancy and highlights a key role for SV2C in the secretory process. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9533 1477-9137 |