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Publication : Direct interaction of otoferlin with syntaxin 1A, SNAP-25, and the L-type voltage-gated calcium channel Cav1.3.

First Author  Ramakrishnan NA Year  2009
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  284
Issue  3 Pages  1364-72
PubMed ID  19004828 Mgi Jnum  J:145889
Mgi Id  MGI:3836237 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M803605200
Citation  Ramakrishnan NA, et al. (2009) Direct interaction of otoferlin with syntaxin 1A, SNAP-25, and the L-type voltage-gated calcium channel Cav1.3. J Biol Chem 284(3):1364-72
abstractText  The molecular mechanisms underlying synaptic exocytosis in the hair cell, the auditory and vestibular receptor cell, are not well understood. Otoferlin, a C2 domain-containing Ca2+-binding protein, has been implicated as having a role in vesicular release. Mutations in the OTOF gene cause nonsyndromic deafness in humans, and OTOF knock-out mice are deaf. In the present study, we generated otoferlin fusion proteins containing two of the same amino acid substitutions detected in DFNB9 patients (P1825A in C2F and L1011P in C2D). The native otoferlin C2F domain bound syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25 in a Ca2+-dependent manner (with optimal 61 microm free Ca2+ required for binding). These interactions were greatly diminished for C2F with the P1825A mutation, possibly because of a reduction in tertiary structural change, induced by Ca2+, for the mutated C2F compared with the native C2F. The otoferlin C2D domain also bound syntaxin 1A, but with weaker affinity (Kd = 1.7 x 10(-5) m) than for the C2F interaction (Kd = 2.6 x 10(-9) m). In contrast, it was the otoferlin C2D domain that bound the Cav1.3 II-III loop, in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The L1011P mutation in C2D rendered this binding insensitive to Ca2+ and considerably diminished. Overall, we demonstrated that otoferlin interacts with two main target-SNARE proteins of the hair-cell synaptic complex, syntaxin 1A and SNAP-25, as well as the calcium channel, with the otoferlin C2F and C2D domains of central importance for binding. Because mutations in the otoferlin C2 domains that cause deafness in humans impair the ability of otoferlin to bind syntaxin, SNAP-25, and the Cav1.3 calcium channel, it is these interactions that may mediate regulation by otoferlin of hair cell synaptic exocytosis critical to inner ear hair cell function.
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