By visualizing how three neural proteins interact with one another, researchers in the journal Nature have revealed how they help groups of brain cells release chemical messages at the same time.
The work describes a surprising new cooperation among the three proteins, and could offer insight into other processes where cells secrete molecules, including insulin and airway mucus..
When a group of neurons receives an electrical signal, the cells release chemicals called neurotransmitters nearly instantaneously - within less than one thousandth of a second. Neurons hold neurotransmitters in bubble-like structures called synaptic vesicles. These structures rest inside the end of long, thin projections that point toward neighboring cells. To free neurotransmitters from their bubbles, neurons must fuse vesicle membranes with the outer membrane of the projections. This opens the bubbles and dumps their contents into the space between cells. The chemical signals then float to neighboring cells to relay a message.
Scientists knew that three proteins are involved in spitting out neurons' chemical signals. A group of proteins called SNAREs provides energy for membrane fusion. Another protein, called synaptotagmin, releases neurotransmitters when calcium ions appear following an electrical signal. A third protein, complexin, prevents cells from spontaneously releasing neurotransmitters. Synaptotagmin and complexin each partner with SNARE proteins, but until now, scientists could not explain how these three components worked together.
The team synthesized portions of each component, allowed them to assemble into a complex, and coaxed the complex to form crystals. Then they determined the structure of the complex by measuring how the crystals diffracted x-ray light.
The crystal structure revealed two ways that the proteins interact. The first interaction - between synaptotagmin and the SNARE proteins - is identical to one theteam described in a 2015 paper in Nature. A second, unexpected, interaction revealed a relationship between all three components in the larger complex.
In this three-component interaction, a curly helix of complexin nestles near a helix in a synaptotagmin protein, arranged so that twists of the helices align like the threads of a screw. These helices also rest atop helices of the SNARE complex.
The researchers engineered mouse neurons to produce mutated synaptotagmin proteins, which weakened the attraction between the three proteins. Cells with mutated proteins, or ones that lacked complexin, lost the ability to synchronize neurotransmitter release.
Based on their observations, the researchers propose that the three-part interaction locks down the SNARE proteins, so they cannot perform the membrane fusion required for neurotransmitter release until the right moment. Complexin pins the three proteins together, and synaptotagmin might unlock the SNARE proteins when triggered by calcium ions.
"This tripartite interaction intuitively explains the role of the three components," senior author says. "Now we can explain the cooperation between complexin, synaptotagmin, and the SNARE complex."
There are more than 60 different SNARE proteins in mammalian cells, which, along with various forms of synaptotagmin, are involved in hormone release and other cellular processes. A similar three-part interaction involving SNARE proteins may be used for other calcium-dependent cellular release processes too, senior author says.
http://www.hhmi.org/news/3-d-protein-structure-offers-insight-rapid-communication-brain-cells
https://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v548/n7668/full/nature23484.html
Molecular interactions for the release of neurotransmitters
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