4.8 Article

Synaptojanin and Endophilin Mediate Neck Formation during Ultrafast Endocytosis

Journal

NEURON
Volume 98, Issue 6, Pages 1184-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2018.06.005

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Funding

  1. EMBO [ASTF 443-2012]
  2. Grass Foundation
  3. Johns Hopkins University
  4. University of Chicago - MBL Lillie award
  5. National Science Foundation [1727271]
  6. NIH [NS034307]
  7. European Research Council grant [249939 SYNVGLUT]
  8. German Research Council grants [Neurocure EXC 257, SFB 665, SFB 958, SFB889]
  9. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND STROKE [R37NS034307, R01NS034307] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Ultrafast endocytosis generates vesicles from the plasma membrane as quickly as 50 ms in hippocampal neurons following synaptic vesicle fusion. The molecular mechanism underlying the rapid maturation of these endocytic pits is not known. Here we demonstrate that synaptojanin-1, and its partner endophilin-A, function in ultrafast endocytosis. In the absence of synaptojanin or endophilin, the membrane is rapidly invaginated, but pits do not become constricted at the base. The 5-phosphatase activity of synaptojanin is involved in formation of the neck, but 4-phosphatase is not required. Nevertheless, these pits are eventually cleaved into vesicles; within a 30-s interval, synaptic endosomes form and are resolved by clathrin-mediated budding. Then synaptojanin and endophilin function at a second step to aid with the removal of clathrin coats from the regenerated vesicles. These data together suggest that synaptojanin and endophilin can mediate membrane remodeling on a millisecond timescale during ultrafast endocytosis.

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