| Literature DB >> 32101738 |
Arndt Pechstein1, Nikolay Tomilin2, Kristin Fredrich2, Olga Vorontsova2, Elena Sopova3, Emma Evergren2, Volker Haucke4, Lennart Brodin5, Oleg Shupliakov6.
Abstract
Liquid-liquid phase separation is an increasingly recognized mechanism for compartmentalization in cells. Recent in vitro studies suggest that this organizational principle may apply to synaptic vesicle clusters. Here we test this possibility by performing microinjections at the living lamprey giant reticulospinal synapse. Axons are maintained at rest to examine whether reagents introduced into the cytosol enter a putative liquid phase to disrupt critical protein-protein interactions. Compounds that perturb the intrinsically disordered region of synapsin, which is critical for liquid phase organization in vitro, cause dispersion of synaptic vesicles from resting clusters. Reagents that perturb SH3 domain interactions with synapsin are ineffective at rest. Our results indicate that synaptic vesicles at a living central synapse are organized as a distinct liquid phase maintained by interactions via the intrinsically disordered region of synapsin.Keywords: SH3 domain interaction; accessory proteins; phase separation; synapse; synapsin; synaptic vesicle
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32101738 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.01.092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423