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Multiple pathways and independent functional pools in insulin granule exocytosis.

Tetsuro Izumi
Published in: Genes to cells : devoted to molecular & cellular mechanisms (2023)
In contrast to synaptic vesicle exocytosis, secretory granule exocytosis follows a much longer time course, and thus allows for different prefusion states prior to stimulation. Indeed, total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy in living pancreatic β cells reveals that, prior to stimulation, either visible or invisible granules fuse in parallel during both early (first) and late (second) phases after glucose stimulation. Therefore, fusion occurs not only from granules predocked to the plasma membrane but also from those translocated from the cell interior during ongoing stimulation. Recent findings suggest that such heterogeneous exocytosis is conducted by a specific set of multiple Rab27 effectors that appear to operate on the same granule; namely, exophilin-8, granuphilin, and melanophilin play differential roles in distinct secretory pathways to final fusion. Furthermore, the exocyst, which is known to tether secretory vesicles to the plasma membrane in constitutive exocytosis, cooperatively functions with these Rab27 effectors in regulated exocytosis. In this review, the basic nature of insulin granule exocytosis will be described as a representative example of secretory granule exocytosis, followed by a discussion of the means by which different Rab27 effectors and the exocyst coordinate to regulate the entire exocytic processes in β cells.
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