Elhamdani A, Martin T F, Kowalchyk J A, Artalejo C R
Department of Pharmacology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201, USA.
J Neurosci. 1999 Sep 1;19(17):7375-83. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.19-17-07375.1999.
Calcium-dependent activator protein for secretion (CAPS) is a neural/endocrine cell-specific protein that has been shown to function at the Ca(2+)-dependent triggering step of dense-core vesicle (DCV) exocytosis in permeabilized PC12 cells. To evaluate the function of CAPS under physiological conditions, we introduced affinity-purified anti-CAPS IgGs into calf adrenal chromaffin (AC) cells via a patch pipette and tested the kinetics of catecholamine secretion using both amperometric and membrane capacitance techniques. The antibodies reacted with a single major approximately 145 kDa protein in AC cells based on immunoblot analysis. AC cells stimulated with sequential trains of action potentials at 7 Hz resulted in successive secretory episodes of equivalent magnitude. When either of two different anti-CAPS IgGs or their Fab fragments were present, a rapid and progressive inhibition of catecholamine release ensued to a maximum of >80%. The effect was specific because preabsorption of IgGs with the respective antigens ablated the inhibitory effect, and the IgGs had no effect on Ca currents. CAPS immunoneutralization not only reduced the number of amperometric spikes but markedly altered the kinetic characteristics of the residual events. The remaining spikes were much smaller (by 85%) and broader (by approximately 3.5-fold) than those in control cells, suggesting that CAPS plays a role in determining release of vesicle contents via the fusion pore. Anti-CAPS IgGs also slowed the rate of the initial exocytotic capacitance burst, representing the docked-and-primed vesicle pool, by approximately 90% but had no effect on the kinetics of rapid endocytosis. These results suggest that CAPS is a key component regulating the fusion of DCVs to the plasma membrane, and possibly fusion pore dilation, in catecholamine secretion from AC cells.
分泌型钙依赖性激活蛋白(CAPS)是一种神经/内分泌细胞特异性蛋白,已证实在透化的PC12细胞中,它在致密核心囊泡(DCV)胞吐作用的钙依赖性触发步骤中发挥作用。为了评估CAPS在生理条件下的功能,我们通过膜片吸管将亲和纯化的抗CAPS IgG引入小牛肾上腺嗜铬(AC)细胞,并使用安培法和膜电容技术测试儿茶酚胺分泌的动力学。基于免疫印迹分析,抗体与AC细胞中一种单一的主要约145 kDa蛋白发生反应。以7 Hz的连续动作电位序列刺激AC细胞会导致幅度相当的连续分泌事件。当存在两种不同的抗CAPS IgG或其Fab片段中的任何一种时,儿茶酚胺释放会迅速且逐渐受到抑制,最大抑制率>80%。这种效应是特异性的,因为用相应抗原预先吸收IgG可消除抑制作用,并且IgG对钙电流没有影响。CAPS免疫中和不仅减少了安培峰的数量,而且显著改变了残留事件的动力学特征。其余的峰比对照细胞中的峰小得多(减少85%)且宽得多(约3.5倍),这表明CAPS在通过融合孔决定囊泡内容物释放中起作用。抗CAPS IgG还使代表停靠并准备好的囊泡池的初始胞吐电容爆发速率减慢约90%,但对快速内吞作用的动力学没有影响。这些结果表明,CAPS是调节AC细胞儿茶酚胺分泌中DCV与质膜融合以及可能的融合孔扩张的关键成分。