1. Syntaxin clusters assemble reversibly at sites of secretory granules in live cells.
- Author
-
Barga, S., Knowles, M. K., Chen, X., Midorikawa, M., and Almers, Wolfhard
- Subjects
- *
CELL membranes , *EXOCYTOSIS , *CELL physiology , *CYTOLOGY , *MEMBRANE fusion - Abstract
Syntaxin resides in the plasma membrane, where it helps to catalyze membrane fusion during exocytosis. The protein also forms clusters in cell-free and granule-free plasma-membrane sheets. We imaged the interaction between syntaxin and single secretory granules by two-color total internal reflection micros- copy in PC12 cells. Syntaxin-GFP assembled in clusters at sites where single granules had docked at the plasma membrane. Clusters were intermittently present at granule sites, as syntaxin molecules assembled and disassembled in a coordinated fashion. Recruitment to granules required the N-terminal domain of syntaxin, but not the entry of syntaxin into SNARE complexes. Clusters facilitated exocytosis and disassembled once exocytosis was complete. Syntaxin cluster formation defines an intermediate step in exocytosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF