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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

The last exon of SNAP-23 regulates granule exocytosis from mast cells.

SNAP-25 and its ubiquitous homolog SNAP-23 are members of the SNARE family of proteins that regulate membrane fusion during exocytosis. Although SNAP-23 has been shown to participate in a variety of intracellular transport processes, the structural domains of SNAP-23 that are required for its interaction with other SNAREs have not been determined. By employing deletion mutagenesis we found that deletion of the amino-terminal 18 amino acids of SNAP-23 ( encoded in the first exon) dramatically inhibited binding of SNAP-23 to both the target SNARE syntaxin and the vesicle SNARE vesicle-associated membrane protein(VAMP). By contrast, deletion of the carboxyl-terminal 23 amino acids (encoded in the last exon) of SNAP-23 does not affect SNAP-23 binding to syntaxin but profoundly inhibits its binding to VAMP. To determine the functional relevance of the modular structure of SNAP-23, we overexpressed SNAP-23 in cells possessing the capacity to undergo regulated exocytosis. Expression of human SNAP-23 in a rat mast cell line significantly enhanced exocytosis, and this effect was not observed in transfectants expressing the carboxyl-terminal VAMP- binding mutant of SNAP-23. Despite considerable amino acid identity, we found that human SNAP-23 bound to SNAREs more efficiently than did rat SNAP-23. These data demonstrate that the introduction of a "better" SNARE binder into secretory cells augments exocytosis and defines the carboxyl terminus of SNAP-23 as an essential regulator of exocytosis in mast cells.[1]

References

  1. The last exon of SNAP-23 regulates granule exocytosis from mast cells. Vaidyanathan, V.V., Puri, N., Roche, P.A. J. Biol. Chem. (2001) [Pubmed]
 
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