Monck J R, Fernandez J M
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905.
Neuron. 1994 Apr;12(4):707-16. doi: 10.1016/0896-6273(94)90325-5.
Membrane fusion is ubiquitous in biological systems, occurring in the simplest of unicellular eukaryotes as well as higher eukaryotes. As soon as the first primitive eukaryotic cell utilized a lipid bilayer as an outer membrane, membrane fusion (and fission) became necessary for the traffic of material from the outside to the inside, the inside to the outside, and between different intracellular membrane-bounded compartments. The earliest cells would have made use of the intrinsic ability of lipid bilayers to fuse under certain conditions. Although this fusogenic property of bilayers has been known for some time, it is has become clear only relatively recently that two phospholipid bilayers will fuse spontaneously, owing to a hydrophobic force, when the bilayers are brought close together under conditions of membrane tension or high curvature (Helm and Israelachvili, 1993). The primeval cell would have used proteins to develop the appropriate architecture in which such fusion would occur in a regulated manner. During the course of evolution, ever more sophisticated ways of regulating this basic process would evolve, but the underlying fusion mechanism would remain unchanged. We have proposed that a macromolecular scaffold of proteins is responsible for bringing the plasma membrane close to the secretory granule membranes and creating the architecture that enables the hydrophobic force to cause fusion (Figure 1; Nanavati et al., 1992; Monck and Fernandez, 1992; Oberhauser and Fernandez, 1993). Evidence is now accumulating that there are several highly conserved families of proteins associated with vesicle fusion events, from yeast to mammalian cells, and with intracellular traffic, as well as with regulated exocytosis and synaptic transmission (Bennett and Scheller, 1993; Sollner et al., 1993; Südhof et al., 1993). The molecular structures (or scaffolds) that regulate membrane fusion are likely to contain related proteins and share certain fundamental properties.
膜融合在生物系统中普遍存在,在最简单的单细胞真核生物以及高等真核生物中都会发生。最早的原始真核细胞一旦利用脂质双层作为外膜,膜融合(和裂变)对于物质从细胞外到细胞内、从细胞内到细胞外以及在不同的细胞内膜结合区室之间的运输就变得必不可少。最早的细胞可能利用了脂质双层在某些条件下融合的内在能力。尽管双层膜的这种融合特性已为人所知有一段时间了,但直到最近才清楚地认识到,当双层膜在膜张力或高曲率条件下靠近时,由于疏水力,两个磷脂双层会自发融合(Helm和Israelachvili,1993)。原始细胞可能利用蛋白质来构建合适的结构,使这种融合能够以一种受调控的方式发生。在进化过程中,调节这个基本过程的方式会变得越来越复杂,但潜在的融合机制将保持不变。我们已经提出,蛋白质的大分子支架负责使质膜靠近分泌颗粒膜,并创建一种结构,使疏水力能够导致融合(图1;Nanavati等人,1992;Monck和Fernandez,1992;Oberhauser和Fernandez,1993)。现在越来越多的证据表明,从酵母到哺乳动物细胞,有几个高度保守的蛋白质家族与囊泡融合事件、细胞内运输以及受调控的胞吐作用和突触传递有关(Bennett和Scheller,1993;Sollner等人,1993;Südhof等人,1993)。调节膜融合的分子结构(或支架)可能包含相关蛋白质并具有某些基本特性。