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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 15, 2002, 22(18):7968-7981
Rac GTPase Plays an Essential Role in Exocytosis by Controlling
the Fusion Competence of Release Sites
Yann
Humeau1,
Michel R.
Popoff2,
Hiroshi
Kojima1,
Frédéric
Doussau1, and
Bernard
Poulain1
1 Neurotransmission et Sécrétion
Neuroendocrine, UPR2356 du Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, IFR-37 des Neurosciences, F-67084 Strasbourg Cedex,
France, and 2 Toxines Microbiennes, Institut
Pasteur, F-75724 Paris Cedex 15, France
The role of small GTPases of the Rho family in synaptic functions
has been addressed by analyzing the effects of lethal toxin (LT) from
Clostridium sordellii strain IP82 (LT82) on
neurotransmitter release at evoked identified synapses in the buccal
ganglion of Aplysia. LT82 is a large
monoglucosyltranferase that uses UDP-glucose as cofactor and
glucosylates Rac (a small GTPase related to Rho), and Ras, Ral, and Rap
(three GTPases of the Ras family). Intraneuronal application of LT (50 nM) rapidly inhibits evoked acetylcholine (ACh) release as
monitored electrophysiologically. Injection of the catalytic domain of
the toxin similarly blocked ACh release, but not when key amino acids
needed for glucosylation were mutated. Intraneuronal application of
competitive nucleotide sugars that differentially prevent glucosylation
of Rac- and Ras-related GTPases, and the use of a toxin variant
that affects a different spectrum of small GTPases, established that
glucosylation of Rac is responsible for the reduction in ACh release.
To determine the quantal release parameters affected by Rac
glucosylation, we developed a nonstationary analysis of the
fluctuations in postsynaptic response amplitudes that was performed
before and after the toxin had acted or during toxin action. The
results indicate that neither the quantal size nor the average
probability for release were affected by lethal toxin action. ACh
release blockage by LT82 was only caused by a reduction in the number
of functional release sites. This reveals that after docking of
synaptic vesicles, vesicular Rac stimulates a membrane effector (or
effectors) essential for the fusion competence of the exocytotic sites.
Key words:
Aplysia; synapse; exocytosis; quantal
parameters; synaptic vesicle fusion; Rho-GTPases; clostridial toxins; fluctuation analysis
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22187968-14$05.00/0
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