| Literature DB >> 33796537 |
Gaël Ménasché1, Cyril Longé1, Manuela Bratti2,3, Ulrich Blank2,3.
Abstract
Mast cells are well known for their role in allergies and many chronic inflammatory diseases. They release upon stimulation, e.g., via the IgE receptor, numerous bioactive compounds from cytoplasmic secretory granules. The regulation of granule secretion and its interaction with the cytoskeleton and transport mechanisms has only recently begun to be understood. These studies have provided new insight into the interaction between the secretory machinery and cytoskeletal elements in the regulation of the degranulation process. They suggest a tight coupling of these two systems, implying a series of specific signaling effectors and adaptor molecules. Here we review recent knowledge describing the signaling events regulating cytoskeletal reorganization and secretory granule transport machinery in conjunction with the membrane fusion machinery that occur during mast cell degranulation. The new insight into MC biology offers novel strategies to treat human allergic and inflammatory diseases targeting the late steps that affect harmful release from granular stores leaving regulatory cytokine secretion intact.Entities:
Keywords: actin; cytoskeleton; degranulation; mast cells; microtubule; secretory granule fusion; secretory granule transport; signaling
Year: 2021 PMID: 33796537 PMCID: PMC8007931 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.652077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1FcεRI signaling pathways involved in cytoskeleton reorganization required for SG transport and fusion. The aggregation of the FcεRI by the IgE-allergen complex leads to phosphorylation of the ITAMs and the PTK (Fyn, Lyn, and Syk). They participate in the phosphorylation of multiple adapter proteins (Grb2, Gab2, SLP76, LAT), which generate additional signalosomes further propagating the signal. FcεRI-mediated signaling can be partitioned into Ca2+-dependent (LAT, SLP76; PLCγ, DAG, IP3, PKC) and Ca2+-independent pathways (Fyn, Gab2, PI3K, RhoA, RasGRP1, Arf1, Nck2, DOCK5, Akt) that mediate microtubule and actin reorganization necessary for SG transport and fusion. Actin dynamics in MC is also regulated by several actors including RhoA, Cdc42, Rac1, WIP, WASP, WAVE, Coronin1A, DBN1, and Cofilin. Microtubule dynamics is regulated by stabilization at the plus-end extremity by the trimeric protein complex EB1/APC/mDia1 and by a crosstalk between Fyn, Syk, and γ-tubulin signaling that may lead to microtubule nucleation at the MTOC or to enhanced non-centrosomal microtubule nucleation. Microtubule-mediated SG retrograde transport on microtubule is mediated by Rab12 that recruits the RILP-dynein complex. SG anterograde transport requires PI3K activation that allows kinesin-1’s accessibility to the cargo receptor Slp3. The SG switch from microtubules to cortical actin is regulated by the Rab27a/Mlph/MyoVa complex. Thin arrows indicate direct effects on signaling cascades, cytoskeleton reorganization, SG translocation, and fusion events.
Proteins implicated in SG fusion.
| Protein (Hu/mo gene name) | Functional domains | Role in MC exocytosis |
| SNAP-23 = Synaptosomal-associated protein 23 ( | PM-localized t-SNARE; enhanced trans-SNARE complex formation and cytoplasmic relocation along degranulation channels (SG and SG-PM fusion) in stimulated MC; Inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KD MC and after introduction of blocking Abs | |
| STX3 = Syntaxin 3 ( | SG-localized t-SNARE; enhanced trans-SNARE complex formation and PM relocation (SG-SG and SG-PM fusion) in stimulated MC; inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KO/KD MC | |
| STX4 = Syntaxin 4 ( | PM-localized t-SNARE; enhanced trans-SNARE complex formation upon stimulation (role in SG-PM fusion?); no inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KO MC; partial inhibition in KD MC | |
| STX11 = Syntaxin 11 ( | Expression upregulated upon IgE/Ag and LPS stimulation; no inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KO MC; plays a role in lytic granule exocytosis in NK and T cells | |
| VAMP8 = Vesicle-associated membrane protein-8, also endobrevin ( | Endosomal, lysosomal and SG-localized v-SNARE; enhanced trans-SNARE complex formation in stimulated MC (role in SG and SG-PM fusion); partial inhibit of stimulated exocytosis in KO and KD MC; one manuscript reports specific effect on β-hexosaminidase but not histamine secretion | |
| VAMP7 = vesicle-associated membrane protein 7, also Tetanus Insensitive Ti-VAMP ( | Punctuate staining pattern in resting hu MC (SG?), PM relocation in stimulated primary hu MC; enhanced trans-SNARE complexes upon stimulation in hu MC; inhibition of stimulated exocytosis In KD MC and after introduction of blocking Abs | |
| VAMP2 = vesicle associated membrane protein 2, also Synaptobrevin-2 ( | Transfected (but not endogenous) fluorescent VAMP2 showed cytoplasmic (SG?) staining; PM translocation in transfected, stimulated RBL cells, enhanced trans-SNARE complexes in stimulated VAMP8 KO but not in WT BMMC; no inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KO BMMC, inhibition with blocking Abs in RBL but not hu MC | |
| SYT2 = Synaptotagmin-2 ( | SG-localized Ca2+ sensor; inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KO MC | |
| CPLX2 = Complexin 2, also Complexin II or Synaphin-1 ( | Punctuate cytoplasmic staining; PM translocation in stimulated RBL cells, pulldown assay reveals binding to an assembled STX3 (not STX4)/SNAP-23/VAMP2 or VAMP8 SNARE complex; stimulated exocytosis is inhibited in KD RBL cells, Ca2+ titration experiments show that CPLX2 increases Ca2+ sensitivity | |
| Munc13-4 = mammalian uncoordinated protein 13-4, also protein unc-13 homolog D ( | Interacts with SG localized Rab27a or b? through a non-canonical motif, the Rab27/Munc13-4 complex is necessary to dock SG at the PM; substantial inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KO MC; in neuronal cells Munc13 homologues promote disassembly of the closed Munc18/STX complex; assures together with Munc18 proper parallel SNARE zippering | |
| DOC2α = Double C2-like domain-containing protein alpha ( | Interacts with Munc13-4 on SG via N-terminal MID and C-terminal C2B domain, colocalizes with SG, partial inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KD and KO MC | |
| Munc18-2/Munc18b = mammalian uncoordinated protein 18-2/18b, also syntaxin binding protein 2 (STXBP2) or protein unc-18 homolog 2/b ( | Interacts with SG-localized STX3, Munc18 has two binding modes: binding in closed conformation to a STX SNARE blocks SNARE zippering; binding in an open conformation to STX SNARE (implicating N-terminal peptide) enables zippering; assures together with Munc13-4 proper parallel SNARE zippering | |
| SCAMP2 = Secretory carrier-associated membrane protein 2 ( | A tetraspanin that may participate in organizing the phospholipid composition for fusion pore formation by coupling Arf6-stimulated PLD generating PIP2; implicates a peptide (E-peptide) as its expression inhibits stimulated exocytosis in MC | |
| STXBP5 = Syntaxin binding protein 5 or tomosyn-1 or Lethal(2) giant larvae protein homolog 3 ( | Binds to STX3 and STX4; acts as a fusion clamp as stimulated exocytosis is enhanced in KD MC; STX4 binding decreases and STX3 increases after stimulation in MC; STXBP5 becomes phosphorylated on multiple S/T residues during stimulation promoting STX3 association and STX4 dissociation | |
| Rab3D = Ras-related protein Rab3D ( | SG-localized; transient PM relocation upon stimulation; “GTP-bound” mutant inhibits exocytosis; no effect in KO MC (compensatory mechanism?); role in actin coating of SG? | |
| RAB5 = Ras-related protein Rab5 ( | Role in SG maturation mediating SG fusion during biogenesis; role in stimulated exocytosis favoring SG recruitment of SNAP-23 and SG-SG fusion; In KD MC balance is shifted from compound to full exocytosis with SG-PM fusion only | |
| RAB27A = Ras-related protein Rab27A ( | SG-localized; regulates cortical actin integrity; switches SG from microtubule-dependent movement to F-actin-dependent docking; enhanced stimulated exocytosis in KO MC; but facilitates stimulated exocytosis together with Rab27b and Munc13-4 (Rab27a magnifies inhibitory effect of Rab27b on stimulated exocytosis in DKO MC) | |
| RAB27B = Ras-related protein Rab27B ( | SG-localized; regulates microtubule-dependent movement of SG connecting via Slp3 to the kinesin-1 motor; inhibition of stimulated exocytosis in KO MC, may act partly together with Rab27a as inhibition of stimulated exocytosis is magnified in DKO MC | |
| RAB37 = Ras-related protein Rab37 ( | SG-localized, GTP-bound Rab37 interacts with Munc13-4 in a trimeric complex containing Rab27 and Munc13-4; KD MC and transfected GTP-bound Rab37 exhibit hypersecretory phenotypes; Rab37 may counteract the Rab27/Munc13-4-dependent docking/priming step |
FIGURE 2The docking/fusion machinery in MC degranulation. FcεRI aggregation initiates proximal signaling that lead to increases of intracellular Ca2+ levels and the activation of PKC, PLD, Rak3D, and IKKβ2. These signaling events enable SG docking at the PM and their fusion to release granular content. In MC, fusion occurs also between SG, a process known as compound exocytosis, enabling massive release of inflammatory mediators. For simplicity the docking and fusion steps are detailed only at the PM. Note, however, that because of the compound exocytosis mechanisms, many of the molecular effectors are localized on SG eventually redistributing and serving also at the PM after stimulation (see text of Table 1 for further details). In addition, some effectors (e.g., SNAP-23) reversely relocate to SG to serve in the SG fusion process. This process has been shown to be regulated by Rab5 and Ikkβ2. Membrane fusion involves SNARE proteins that lie on opposing membranes. In MC, they include the t-SNARE SNAP-23, STX 3 and 4, and the v-SNAREs VAMP 7 and 8 (see text and Table 1 for further details). Fusion involves formation of a tetrameric trans-SNARE complex that is regulated by numerous accessory proteins allowing SG to dock at the PM or between themselves (not shown) and to facilitate their fusion. Docking involves a complex between Rab27, Munc13-4, and Doc2α and the Ca2+-activated phospholipid binding of Munc13-4 and Doc2α C2 domains. The formation of the docking complex is prevented by Rab37 when bound in a tripartite complex with Rab27 and Munc13-4. SNARE complex formation and fusion is regulated by the concerted action of Munc18-2 and Munc13-4 that allow the proper alignment of SNARE helices and is further assisted by CPLX2 and the Ca2+ sensor Syt2 that triggers fusion at high Ca2+ levels. STXBP5/tomosyn-1, by binding to its STX partner (STX3/4) in a manner regulated by PKCδ, controls the availability of fusion-competent SNARE proteins available for fusion. SCAMP2 may participate in the generation of an appropriate phospholipid composition through the coupling of Arf6-stimulated PLD activity. Rab3D, besides regulating Rak3D activity known to phosphorylate STX4 and inhibit SNAP-23 binding, may have a possible role in actin coating of SG supporting terminal transport and SG content extrusion.