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Publication : Synaptotagmin-mediated bending of the target membrane is a critical step in Ca(2+)-regulated fusion.

First Author  Hui E Year  2009
Journal  Cell Volume  138
Issue  4 Pages  709-21
PubMed ID  19703397 Mgi Jnum  J:200387
Mgi Id  MGI:5508581 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2009.05.049
Citation  Hui E, et al. (2009) Synaptotagmin-mediated bending of the target membrane is a critical step in Ca(2+)-regulated fusion. Cell 138(4):709-21
abstractText  Decades ago it was proposed that exocytosis involves invagination of the target membrane, resulting in a highly localized site of contact between the bilayers destined to fuse. The vesicle protein synaptotagmin-I (syt) bends membranes in response to Ca(2+), but whether this drives localized invagination of the target membrane to accelerate fusion has not been determined. Previous studies relied on reconstituted vesicles that were already highly curved and used mutations in syt that were not selective for membrane-bending activity. Here, we directly address this question by utilizing vesicles with different degrees of curvature. A tubulation-defective syt mutant was able to promote fusion between highly curved SNARE-bearing liposomes but exhibited a marked loss of activity when the membranes were relatively flat. Moreover, bending of flat membranes by adding an N-BAR domain rescued the function of the tubulation-deficient syt mutant. Hence, syt-mediated membrane bending is a critical step in membrane fusion.
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