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Latrophilin, Neurexin, and Their Signaling-deficient Mutants Facilitate α-Latrotoxin Insertion into Membranes but Are Not Involved in Pore Formation

Authors :
C Manser
J. O. Dolly
Eugene V. Grishin
Tatyana Volkova
Richard H. Ashley
EE Dudina
Kirill E. Volynski
Frederic A. Meunier
Vera G. Lelianova
Yuri A. Ushkaryov
M A Rahman
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 275:41175-41183
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2000.

Abstract

Pure alpha-latrotoxin is very inefficient at forming channels/pores in artificial lipid bilayers or in the plasma membrane of non-secretory cells. However, the toxin induces pores efficiently in COS-7 cells transfected with the heptahelical receptor latrophilin or the monotopic receptor neurexin. Signaling-deficient (truncated) mutants of latrophilin and latrophilin-neurexin hybrids also facilitate pore induction, which correlates with toxin binding irrespective of receptor structure. This rules out the involvement of signaling in pore formation. With any receptor, the alpha-latrotoxin pores are permeable to Ca(2+) and small molecules including fluorescein isothiocyanate and norepinephrine. Bound alpha-latrotoxin remains on the cell surface without penetrating completely into the cytosol. Higher temperatures facilitate insertion of the toxin into the plasma membrane, where it co-localizes with latrophilin (under all conditions) and with neurexin (in the presence of Ca(2+)). Interestingly, on subsequent removal of Ca(2+), alpha-latrotoxin dissociates from neurexin but remains in the membrane and continues to form pores. These receptor-independent pores are inhibited by anti-alpha-latrotoxin antibodies. Our results indicate that (i) alpha-latrotoxin is a pore-forming toxin, (ii) receptors that bind alpha-latrotoxin facilitate its insertion into the membrane, (iii) the receptors are not physically involved in the pore structure, (iv) alpha-latrotoxin pores may be independent of the receptors, and (v) pore formation does not require alpha-latrotoxin interaction with other neuronal proteins.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
275
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae8dfaf5e0e23571b26c8a339babe570