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. 2012 Jan 20;287(4):2810-8.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.M111.290882. Epub 2011 Nov 30.

A Ca(v)3.2/syntaxin-1A signaling complex controls T-type channel activity and low-threshold exocytosis

Affiliations

A Ca(v)3.2/syntaxin-1A signaling complex controls T-type channel activity and low-threshold exocytosis

Norbert Weiss et al. J Biol Chem. .

Abstract

T-type calcium channels represent a key pathway for Ca(2+) entry near the resting membrane potential. Increasing evidence supports a unique role of these channels in fast and low-threshold exocytosis in an action potential-independent manner, but the underlying molecular mechanisms have remained unknown. Here, we report the existence of a syntaxin-1A/Ca(v)3.2 T-type calcium channel signaling complex that relies on molecular determinants that are distinct from the synaptic protein interaction site (synprint) found in synaptic high voltage-activated calcium channels. This interaction potently modulated Ca(v)3.2 channel activity, by reducing channel availability. Other members of the T-type calcium channel family were also regulated by syntaxin-1A, but to a smaller extent. Overexpression of Ca(v)3.2 channels in MPC 9/3L-AH chromaffin cells induced low-threshold secretion that could be prevented by uncoupling the channels from syntaxin-1A. Altogether, our findings provide compelling evidence for the existence of a syntaxin-1A/T-type Ca(2+) channel signaling complex and provide new insights into the molecular mechanism by which these channels control low-threshold exocytosis.

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Figures

FIGURE 1.
FIGURE 1.
Cav3.2 channel interacts with syntaxin-1A in central neurons. A, confocal images of nRT neurons permeabilized and stained for Cav3.2 (green) and syntaxin-1A (red). Overlaid images and colocalized pixels (in white) are shown. B, intensity correlation analysis (ICA) plots of Cav3.2 and syntaxin-1A staining intensities against their respective (A-a)(B-b) values performed from the ROIs indicated in the overlaid image in A. IQC = +0.31 and +0.38 for soma and neurite regions, respectively. C, co-immunoprecipitation of syntaxin-1A from rat brain homogenate with specific anti-Cav3.1, anti-Cav3.2, and anti-Cav3.3 antibodies.
FIGURE 2.
FIGURE 2.
Syntaxin-1A modulates Cav3.2 channel inactivation. A, representative Ba2+ current traces recorded from a Cav3.2- (top panel) and Cav3.2/Stx-1A-expressing cell (bottom panel) in response to 150 ms depolarizing steps to −20 mV from a holding potential varied from −120 mV to −50 mV (a to f). B, corresponding mean normalized steady-state inactivation curves for Cav3.2- (filled circles) and Cav3.2/Stx-1A-expressing cells (open circles). C, plot of the mean shift values in the half-inactivation potential of Cav3.2 channel coexpressed with the different protein combinations indicated in the figure. D, mean normalized activation curve for Cav3.2 (filled circles) and Cav3.2/Stx1A-expressing cells (open circles). Inset indicates the shift values in the half-activation potential produced upon coexpression of Stx1A or Stx1AΔTM. Stx-1A, syntaxin-1A; BoNT/C, botulinium neurotoxin C1.
FIGURE 3.
FIGURE 3.
Syntaxin-1A interacts within the carboxy-terminal domain of Cav3. 2. A, schematic representation of the different constructs of intracellular regions of Cav3.2 used. B, whole-cell Ba2+ currents (top panels) recorded in response to a 150 ms depolarizing step to −20 mV from a holding potential of −85 mV before (P1) and after (P2) a 5 s hyperpolarizing pulse to −130 mV in a Cav3.2 (left panel), Cav3.2/Stx-1A (middle panel), and Cav3.2/Stx-1A/CD4-Cav3.2Cter-expressing cell (right panel) and the corresponding mean plot of the current facilitation (IP2/IP1) (bottom panel). Note that the hyperpolarizing pulse produces a strong current facilitation in the presence of Stx-1A, which is competitively and specifically abolished upon co-expression of the CD4-Cav3.2Cter construct. C, confocal images of living COS cells showing the translocation of the EGFP-Cav3.2Cter construct (green) to the plasma membrane mediated by Stx-1A. Plasma membrane was stained with rhodamine-labeled concanavalin A (ConA-Rhod, red). Overlaid images and pixel intensity profiles of crossed sections indicated by the white line are shown. Note that Stx-1A does not translocate EGFP-Cav3.2II-III linker fusion protein. D, co-immunoprecipitation of the CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter fusion protein from tsA-201 cells co-transfected with Stx-1A-Myc. The upper panel shows the immunoblot of CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter fusion protein in the absence (−) and presence (+) of Stx-1A-Myc using an anti-GFP antibody. *, possible degradation of the CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter fusion protein. The lower panel shows the results of the co-immunoprecipitation of the CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter fusion protein with Stx-1A-Myc using an anti-Myc antibody. In the absence of Stx-1A-Myc, the antibody alone is not able to immunoprecipitate the CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter fusion protein.
FIGURE 4.
FIGURE 4.
Cav3.2 channel induces voltage-dependent exocytosis. A, representative Ca2+ current traces recoded from MPC 9/3L-AH cells expressing Cav3.2 channel alone (top panel), and in combination with CD4-Cav3.2Cter (middle panel) or CD4-Cav3.2II-II linker (bottom panel) in response to a 100 ms long depolarizing step to −20 mV from a holding potential of −90 mV. These data show that T-type currents are functional in the presence of CD4-Cav3.2Cter. B, corresponding mean Ca2+ influx normalized by the whole-cell capacitance [QCa density (pC/pF)] elicited by the 100 ms long depolarizing step to −20 mV. C, capacitance traces plotted as a function of time from the same cells shown in A. D, corresponding mean exocytosis [ΔCm (fF)] normalized as a function of Ca2+ entry [QCa density (pC/pF)].
FIGURE 5.
FIGURE 5.
Expression of the CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter fusion protein does not prevent exocytosis induced by intracellular calcium elevation. A, representative capacitance traces plotted as a function of time recorded from MPC 9/3L-AH cells expressing EGFP (black trace) or CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter (light gray) in response to the superfusion of 1 μm ionomycin (indicated by the arrow). A representative capacitance trace recorded from an EGFP-expressing cell in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ (EGFP, 0 Ca2+) is also shown (dark gray). B, corresponding mean exocytosis values [ΔCm (fF)] for EGFP in the presence (black) and the absence (dark gray) of extracellular Ca2+, and for CD4-EGFP-Cav3.2Cter-expressing cells (light gray). C, corresponding time constants (tau) of the capacitance change obtained by fitting the rising phase of the traces with a single exponential function.

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