4.5 Article

The C-terminal transmembrane region of synaptobrevin binds synaptophysin from adult synaptic vesicles

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EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
卷 84, 期 4, 页码 467-475

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ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejcb.2004.11.007

关键词

synaptophysin; synaptobrevin; clostridial neurotoxins; Syp/Syb complex; SNARE complex

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Synaptophysin and synaptobrevin are abundant membrane proteins of neuronal small synaptic vesicles. In mature, differentiated neurons they form the synaptophysin/synaptobrevin (Syp/Syb) complex. Synaptobrevin also interacts with the plasma membrane-associated proteins syntaxin and SNAP25, thereby forming the SNARE complex necessary for exocytotic membrane fusion. The two complexes are mutually exclusive. Synaptobrevin is a C-terminally membrane-anchored protein with one transmembrane domain. While its interaction with its SNARE partners is mediated exclusively by its N-terminal cytosolic region it has been unclear so far how binding to synaptophysin is accomplished. Here, we show that synaptobrevin can be cleaved in its synaptophysin-bound form by tetanus toxin and botulinum neurotoxin 13, or by botulinum neurotoxin D, leaving shorter or longer C-terminal peptide chains bound to synaptophysin, respectively. A recombinant, C-terminally His-tagged synaptobrevin fragment bound to nickel beads specifically bound synaptophysin, syntaxin and SNAP25 from vesicular detergent extracts. After cleavage by tetanus toxin or botulinum toxin D light chain, the remaining C-terminal fragment no longer interacted with syntaxin or SNAP 25. In contrast, synaptophysin was still able to bind to the residual C-terminal synaptobrevin cleavage product. In addition, the His-tagged C-terminal synaptobrevin peptide 68-116 was also able to bind synaptophysin in detergent extracts from adult brain membranes. These data suggest that synaptophysin interacts with the C-terminal transmembrane part of synaptobrevin, thereby allowing the N-terminal cytosolic chain to interact freely with the plasma membratic-associated SNARE proteins. Thus, by binding synaptobrevin, synaptophysin may positively modulate neurotransmission. (c) 2005 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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