Login / Signup

Munc13 supports fusogenicity of non-docked vesicles at synapses with disrupted active zones.

Chao TanGiovanni de NolaClaire QiaoCordelia ImigRichard T BornNils BrosePascal S Kaeser
Published in: eLife (2022)
Active zones consist of protein scaffolds that are tightly attached to the presynaptic plasma membrane. They dock and prime synaptic vesicles, couple them to voltage-gated Ca 2+ channels, and direct neurotransmitter release towards postsynaptic receptor domains. Simultaneous RIM+ELKS ablation disrupts these scaffolds, abolishes vesicle docking and removes active zone-targeted Munc13, but some vesicles remain releasable. To assess whether this enduring vesicular fusogenicity is mediated by non-active zone-anchored Munc13 or is Munc13-independent, we ablated Munc13-1 and Munc13-2 in addition to RIM+ELKS in mouse hippocampal neurons. The hextuple knockout synapses lacked docked vesicles, but other ultrastructural features were near-normal despite the strong genetic manipulation. Removing Munc13 in addition to RIM+ELKS impaired action potential-evoked vesicle fusion more strongly than RIM+ELKS knockout by further decreasing the releasable vesicle pool. Hence, Munc13 can support some fusogenicity without RIM and ELKS, and presynaptic recruitment of Munc13, even without active zone-anchoring, suffices to generate some fusion-competent vesicles.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • spinal cord
  • cancer therapy
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • risk assessment
  • drug delivery
  • human health
  • amino acid
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage