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Phorbolester-activated Munc13-1 and ubMunc13-2 exert opposing effects on dense-core vesicle secretion.

Sébastien HouyJoana S MartinsNoa LipsteinJakob Balslev Sørensen
Published in: eLife (2022)
Munc13 proteins are priming factors for SNARE-dependent exocytosis, which are activated by diacylglycerol (DAG)-binding to their C1-domain. Several Munc13 paralogs exist, but their differential roles are not well understood. We studied the interdependence of phorbolesters (DAG mimics) with Munc13-1 and ubMunc13-2 in mouse adrenal chromaffin cells. Although expression of either Munc13-1 or ubMunc13-2 stimulated secretion, phorbolester was only stimulatory for secretion when ubMunc13-2 expression dominated, but inhibitory when Munc13-1 dominated. Accordingly, phorbolester stimulated secretion in wildtype cells, or cells overexpressing ubMunc13-2, but inhibited secretion in Munc13-2/<i>Unc13b</i> knockout (KO) cells or in cells overexpressing Munc13-1. Phorbolester was more stimulatory in the Munc13-1/<i>Unc13a</i> KO than in WT littermates, showing that endogenous Munc13-1 limits the effects of phorbolester. Imaging showed that ubMunc13-2 traffics to the plasma membrane with a time-course matching Ca<sup>2+</sup>-dependent secretion, and trafficking is independent of Synaptotagmin-7 (Syt7). However, in the absence of Syt7, phorbolester became inhibitory for both Munc13-1 and ubMunc13-2-driven secretion, indicating that stimulatory phorbolester x Munc13-2 interaction depends on functional pairing with Syt7. Overall, DAG/phorbolester, ubMunc13-2 and Syt7 form a stimulatory triad for dense-core vesicle priming.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • oxidative stress
  • cell proliferation
  • binding protein