4.8 Article

Regulatory Mechanisms of SNAP-25-Associated Insulin Release Revealed by Live-Cell Confocal and Single-Molecule Localization Imaging

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 94, Issue 44, Pages 15307-15314

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02677

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Scientific Instrument Developing Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
  3. Foundation of Science and Technology Department of Jilin Province
  4. [22150003]
  5. [21727816]
  6. [21721003]
  7. [ZDKYYQ20220005]
  8. [YDZJ202201ZYTS530]

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This study investigated the effects of glucose on the subcellular localization and spatial distribution of t-SNAREs on the plasma membrane using live-cell confocal microscopy and single-molecule imaging. The results showed that increased glucose concentration increased the expression of t-SNAREs and induced larger clusters on the plasma membrane, while glucotoxicity inhibited t-SNAREs transport to the plasma membrane and caused fewer and smaller clusters. In addition, glucotoxicity also decreased the colocalization between t-SNAREs.
Impaired insulin release is the key feature of type 2 diabetes. Insulin secretion, mainly mediated by SNARE proteins, is closely related to the blood glucose level. However, the mechanism underlying how glucose controls SNARE proteins to regulate insulin release is largely unexplained. Herein, we investigated the effects of glucose on the subcellular localization and spatial distribution on the plasma membrane (PM) of t-SNAREs (SNAP-25 and STX-1A) using a live-cell confocal microscope and the single-molecule localization imaging technique. Live-cell confocal and dSTORM imaging first revealed that SNAP-25 was mostly localized to the PM as clusters under the basal glucose concentration condition and demonstrated significant colocalization with STX-1A clusters. Furthermore, our data showed that the elevated glucose concentration increased the expression of SNAP-25 and induced more and larger SNAP-25 clusters on the PM, whereas glucotoxicity severely inhibited SNAP-25 transport to the PM and caused fewer and smaller SNAP-25 clusters on the PM. Additionally, we found that glucotoxicity also had an inhibitory effect on the colocalization between SNAP-25 and STX-1A, indicating a decrease of their interactions. Our study sheds light on the regulatory effects of glucose on the functional organization of t-SNAREs at a subcellular and molecular level, thus providing new insights into the mechanisms by which SNAREs regulate insulin release.

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