4.8 Article

Clathrin regenerates synaptic vesicles from endosomes

Journal

NATURE
Volume 515, Issue 7526, Pages 228-U168

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13846

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Funding

  1. EMBO
  2. US National Institutes of Health [NS034307]
  3. European Research Council grant [249939 SYNVGLUT]
  4. German Research Council grants [Neurocure EXC 257, SFB 665, SFB 958]

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Ultrafast endocytosis can retrieve a single, large endocytic vesicle as fast as 50-100 ms after synaptic vesicle fusion. However, the fate of the large endocytic vesicles is not known. Here we demonstrate that these vesicles transition to a synaptic endosome about one second after stimulation. The endosome is resolved into coated vesicles after 3 s, which in turn become small-diameter synaptic vesicles 5-6 s after stimulation. We disrupted clathrin function using RNA interference (RNAi) and found that clathrin is not required for ultrafast endocytosis but is required to generate synaptic vesicles from the endosome. Ultrafast endocytosis fails when actin polymerization is disrupted, or when neurons are stimulated at room temperature instead of physiological temperature. In the absence of ultrafast endocytosis, synaptic vesicles are retrieved directly from the plasma membrane by clathrin-mediated endocytosis. These results may explain discrepancies among published experiments concerning the role of clathrin in synaptic vesicle endocytosis.

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