Synaptic vesicle exocytosis

TC Südhof, J Rizo - Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in …, 2011 - cshperspectives.cshlp.org
TC Südhof, J Rizo
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology, 2011cshperspectives.cshlp.org
Presynaptic nerve terminals release neurotransmitters by synaptic vesicle exocytosis.
Membrane fusion mediating synaptic exocytosis and other intracellular membrane traffic is
affected by a universal machinery that includes SNARE (for “soluble NSF-attachment protein
receptor”) and SM (for “Sec1/Munc18-like”) proteins. During fusion, vesicular and target
SNARE proteins assemble into an α-helical trans-SNARE complex that forces the two
membranes tightly together, and SM proteins likely wrap around assembling trans-SNARE …
Presynaptic nerve terminals release neurotransmitters by synaptic vesicle exocytosis. Membrane fusion mediating synaptic exocytosis and other intracellular membrane traffic is affected by a universal machinery that includes SNARE (for “soluble NSF-attachment protein receptor”) and SM (for “Sec1/Munc18-like”) proteins. During fusion, vesicular and target SNARE proteins assemble into an α-helical trans-SNARE complex that forces the two membranes tightly together, and SM proteins likely wrap around assembling trans-SNARE complexes to catalyze membrane fusion. After fusion, SNARE complexes are dissociated by the ATPase NSF (for “N-ethylmaleimide sensitive factor”). Fusion-competent conformations of SNARE proteins are maintained by chaperone complexes composed of CSPα, Hsc70, and SGT, and by nonenzymatically acting synuclein chaperones; dysfunction of these chaperones results in neurodegeneration. The synaptic membrane-fusion machinery is controlled by synaptotagmin, and additionally regulated by a presynaptic protein matrix (the “active zone”) that includes Munc13 and RIM proteins as central components.
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