| Literature DB >> 25374362 |
Cordelia Imig1, Sang-Won Min2, Stefanie Krinner1, Marife Arancillo3, Christian Rosenmund3, Thomas C Südhof2, JeongSeop Rhee1, Nils Brose4, Benjamin H Cooper5.
Abstract
Synaptic vesicle docking, priming, and fusion at active zones are orchestrated by a complex molecular machinery. We employed hippocampal organotypic slice cultures from mice lacking key presynaptic proteins, cryofixation, and three-dimensional electron tomography to study the mechanism of synaptic vesicle docking in the same experimental setting, with high precision, and in a near-native state. We dissected previously indistinguishable, sequential steps in synaptic vesicle active zone recruitment (tethering) and membrane attachment (docking) and found that vesicle docking requires Munc13/CAPS family priming proteins and all three neuronal SNAREs, but not Synaptotagmin-1 or Complexins. Our data indicate that membrane-attached vesicles comprise the readily releasable pool of fusion-competent vesicles and that synaptic vesicle docking, priming, and trans-SNARE complex assembly are the respective morphological, functional, and molecular manifestations of the same process, which operates downstream of vesicle tethering by active zone components.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25374362 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2014.10.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173