| Literature DB >> 29549124 |
Dafna Greitzer-Antes1, Li Xie1, Tairan Qin1, Huanli Xie1, Dan Zhu1, Subhankar Dolai1, Tao Liang1, Fei Kang1, Alexandre B Hardy1, Yan He2, Youhou Kang1, Herbert Y Gaisano1.
Abstract
The voltage-dependent K+ (Kv) channel Kv2.1 is a major delayed rectifier in many secretory cells, including pancreatic β cells. In addition, Kv2.1 has a direct role in exocytosis at an undefined step, involving SNARE proteins, that is independent of its ion-conducting pore function. Here, we elucidated the precise step in exocytosis. We previously reported that syntaxin-3 (Syn-3) is the key syntaxin that mediates exocytosis of newcomer secretory granules that spend minimal residence time on the plasma membrane before fusion. Using high-resolution total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, we now show that Kv2.1 forms reservoir clusters on the β-cell plasma membrane and binds Syn-3 via its C-terminal C1b domain, which recruits newcomer insulin secretory granules into this large reservoir. Upon glucose stimulation, secretory granules were released from this reservoir to replenish the pool of newcomer secretory granules for subsequent fusion, occurring just adjacent to the plasma membrane Kv2.1 clusters. C1b deletion blocked the aforementioned Kv2.1-Syn-3-mediated events and reduced fusion of newcomer secretory granules. These insights have therapeutic implications, as Kv2.1 overexpression in type-2 diabetes rat islets restored biphasic insulin secretion.Entities:
Keywords: Kv2.1; insulin secretion; newcomer insulin granule; pancreatic islet; plasma membrane; potassium channel; syntaxin-3; vesicles
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29549124 PMCID: PMC5936832 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.002703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157