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Title: Domain 3a of Munc18-1 plays a crucial role at the priming stage of exocytosis. Author: Han GA, Bin NR, Kang SY, Han L, Sugita S. Journal: J Cell Sci; 2013 Jun 01; 126(Pt 11):2361-71. PubMed ID: 23525015. Abstract: Munc18-1 is believed to prime or stimulate SNARE-mediated membrane fusion/exocytosis through binding to the SNARE complex, in addition to chaperoning its cognate syntaxins. Nevertheless, a Munc18-1 mutant that selectively loses the priming function while retaining the syntaxin chaperoning activity has not been identified. As a consequence, the mechanism that mediates Munc18-1-dependent priming remains unclear. In the course of analyzing the functional outcomes of a variety of point mutations in domain 3a of Munc18-1, we discovered insertion mutants (K332E/K333E with insertions of 5 or 39 residues). These mutants completely lose their ability to rescue secretion whereas they effectively restore syntaxin-1 expression at the plasma membrane as well as dense-core vesicle docking in Munc18-1 and Munc18-2 double-knockdown PC12 cells. The mutants can bind syntaxin-1A in a stoichiometric manner. However, binding to the SNARE complex is impaired compared with the wild type or the hydrophobic pocket mutant (F115E). Our results suggest that the domain 3a of Munc18-1 plays a crucial role in priming of exocytosis, which is independent of its syntaxin-1 chaperoning activity and is downstream of dense-core vesicle docking. We also suggest that the priming mechanism of Munc18-1 involves its domain-3a-dependent interaction with the SNARE complex.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]