| Literature DB >> 23805129 |
Jennifer L Fitch-Tewfik1, Robert Flaumenhaft.
Abstract
The rapid secretion of bioactive amines from chromaffin cells constitutes an important component of the fight or flight response of mammals to stress. Platelets respond to stresses within the vasculature by rapidly secreting cargo at sites of injury, inflammation, or infection. Although chromaffin cells derive from the neural crest and platelets from bone marrow megakaryocytes, both have evolved a heterogeneous assemblage of granule types and a mechanism for efficient release. This article will provide an overview of granule formation and exocytosis in platelets with an emphasis on areas in which the study of chromaffin cells has influenced that of platelets and on similarities between the two secretory systems. Commonalities include the use of transporters to concentrate bioactive amines and other cargos into granules, the role of cytoskeletal remodeling in granule exocytosis, and the use of granules to provide membrane for cytoplasmic projections. The SNAREs and SNARE accessory proteins used by each cell type will also be considered. Finally, we will discuss the newly appreciated role of dynamin family proteins in regulated fusion pore formation. This evaluation of the comparative cell biology of regulated exocytosis in platelets and chromaffin cells demonstrates a convergence of mechanisms between two disparate cell types both tasked with responding rapidly to physiological stimuli.Entities:
Keywords: SNAREs; chromaffin system; cytoskeleton; dynamins; exocytosis; granules; platelets
Year: 2013 PMID: 23805129 PMCID: PMC3693082 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2013.00077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Schematic diagram of platelet. The platelet is a 2–3 μm discoid cell that contains α-granules, dense granules, and lysosomes. Platelets also contain mitochondria. Tunnel invaginations of the plasma membrane forms a complex membrane network, termed the open canalicular system, that courses throughout the platelet interior. Platelet granule secretion is thought to occur through fusion of granules with either the plasma membrane or the open canalicular system.
Comparison of platelets and chromaffin cells.
| Platelets | Chromaffin cells | |
|---|---|---|
| Intravascular | Adrenal medulla | |
| 2–3 μm | ∼20 μm | |
| Hemostasis/thrombosis | Blood pressure modulation | |
| Inflammation | Paracrine signaling | |
| Angiogenesis | Anti-microbial host defense | |
| Anti-microbial host defense | Immune regulation | |
| Mitogenesis | Analgesia | |
| α-Granules, dense granules, and lysosomes | Large dense-core vesicles (LDCVs) and synaptic-like microvesicles (SLMVs) |
Comparison of granule types contained in platelets and chromaffin cells.
| α-Granules | Dense granules | LDCVs | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 200–500 nm | 150 nm | 150–300 nm | |
| 50–80 per platelet | 3–8 per platelet | ∼10,000 per cell | |
| 10 | ∼1 | 13.5 | |
| Integral membrane proteins (e.g., P-selectin, αIIbβ3, GPIbα) | Cations (e.g., Ca2+, Mg2+) | Structural proteins (e.g., granins, glycoproteins) |
Figure 2A comparison of platelet dense granules and chromaffin LDCVs. (A) Several membrane pumps concentration granule contents in the maturing granule. VMAT2 concentrates serotonin (green). An H+-ATPase proton pump maintains the granule at pH ∼5.4 (yellow). MRP4 (blue) is thought to concentrate adenine nucleotides into dense granules. Dense granules also express the tetraspanin CD63 (red) and the lysosomal marker LAMP-2 (purple). Dense granules contain a core of calcium chelated by polyphosphate. (B) The chromaffin large dense-core vesicle (LDCV) express a variety of membrane proteins including VMAT1 amine transporter (red), H+-ATPase (yellow), Cytochrome b561 (orange), p65 (pink), peptidyl α-amidation monooxygenase (PAM) (blue), LAMP-1 (dark purple), and VNUT/Slc17a nucleotide carrier (green). In addition, the following peripheral proteins are associated with the LDCV membrane: endopeptidases PC1/PC2 (brown), GPIII/SGP2/clusterin (black), carboxypeptidase H (lavender), and Dopamine β-hydroxylase (DβH) (turquoise). The LDCV core contains a large number of different proteins and bioactive compounds.
SNAREs and SM proteins in platelets and chromaffin cells.
| Platelets | Chromaffin cells | |
|---|---|---|
| v-SNARES | Vamp-2 | |
| Vamp-3 | VAMP-3 | |
| Vamp-4 | VAMP-7 (TI-VAMP) | |
| Vamp-5 | ||
| Vamp-7 (TI-VAMP) | ||
| t-SNARES | SNAP-23 | |
| SNAP-25 | ||
| SNAP-29 | ||
| Syntaxin-1 | ||
| Syntaxin-2 | ||
| Syntaxin-4 | Syntaxin-2 | |
| Syntaxin-7 | Syntaxin-3 | |
| Syntaxin-8 | Syntaxin-4 | |
| Syntaxin-12 | ||
| Munc13 family | Munc13-1 | |
| Munc13-4 | ||
| Munc18 family | Munc18-1 | |
| Munc18-2 | ||
| Munc18-3 | Munc18-3 |
Essential components of the secretory machinery are highlighted.
Criteria: platelets: Vamp-8, murine knockout; SNAP-23, inhibitory antibodies, inhibitory peptides, overexpression of dominant negative construct; syntaxin-11, FLH4; Munc13-4, murine knockout, FLH3; Munc18-2, FLH5.
Chromaffin: VAMP-2, neurotoxin cleavage; SNAP-25, deletion of C terminus; Syntaxin 1, botulinum neurotoxin C1 and inhibitory antibodies; Munc18-1, murine knockout.
Figure 3Assemblage of SNAREs and SM proteins during platelet granule exocytosis. Munc18b sequesters syntaxin in an inactive state. Munc13-4 docks opposing membranes via interactions with Rab27a, which also binds Slp1. Activation promotes a conformational change in Munc18b that enables the coiled-coil domain of syntaxin to form a four-helical bundle with SNAP-23 and VAMP. Mutations in Munc13-4, as in familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (FHL)-3, syntaxin-11 (FHL-4), Munc18b (FHL-5), or Rab27a (Griscelli syndrome) result in defective secretion (figure adapted from Flaumenhaft, 2013).
Figure 4Single-cell amperometry to measure dense-granule release from platelets. Amperometry demonstrates pore formation progressing through a foot process (left panels) to full granule collapse (upper panels) and pore formation reversing in a “kiss and run” exocytotic event (lower panels) (figure adapted from Koseoglu et al., 2013).