| Literature DB >> 18817873 |
Oualid Sbai1, Lotfi Ferhat, Anne Bernard, Yatma Gueye, Adlane Ould-Yahoui, Sophie Thiolloy, Eliane Charrat, Gérard Charton, Evelyne Tremblay, Jean-Jacques Risso, Jean-Paul Chauvin, Jean-Pierre Arsanto, Santiago Rivera, Michel Khrestchatisky.
Abstract
Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are endopeptidases that cleave matrix, soluble and membrane-bound proteins and are regulated by their endogenous inhibitors the tissue inhibitors of MMPs (TIMPs). Nothing is known about MMP/TIMP trafficking and secretion in neuronal cells. We focussed our attention on the gelatinases MMP-2 and MMP-9, and their inhibitor TIMP-1. MMPs and TIMP-1 fused to GFP were expressed in N2a neuroblastoma and primary neuronal cells to study trafficking and secretion using real time video-microscopy, imaging, electron microscopy and biochemical approaches. We show that MMPs and TIMP-1 are secreted in 160-200 nm vesicles in a Golgi-dependent pathway. These vesicles distribute along microtubules and microfilaments, co-localise differentially with the molecular motors kinesin and myosin Va and undergo both anterograde and retrograde trafficking. MMP-9 retrograde transport involves the dynein/dynactin molecular motor. In hippocampal neurons, MMP-2 and MMP-9 vesicles are preferentially distributed in the somato-dendritic compartment and are found in dendritic spines. Non-transfected hippocampal neurons also demonstrate vesicular secretion of MMP-2 in both its pro- and active forms and gelatinolytic activity localised within dendritic spines. Our results show differential trafficking of MMP and TIMP-1-containing vesicles in neuronal cells and suggest that these vesicles could play a role in neuronal and synaptic plasticity.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18817873 DOI: 10.1016/j.mcn.2008.08.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1044-7431 Impact factor: 4.314