Chaperoning of closed syntaxin-3 through Lys46 and Glu59 in domain 1 of Munc18 proteins is indispensable for mast cell exocytosis

J Cell Sci. 2015 May 15;128(10):1946-60. doi: 10.1242/jcs.165662. Epub 2015 Mar 20.

Abstract

Understanding how Munc18 proteins govern exocytosis is crucial because mutations of this protein cause severe secretion deficits in neuronal and immune cells. Munc18-2 has indispensable roles in the degranulation of mast cell, partly by binding and chaperoning a subset of syntaxin isoforms. However, the key syntaxin that, crucially, participates in the degranulation – whose levels and intracellular localization are regulated by Munc18-2 – remains unknown. Here, we demonstrate that double knockdown of Munc18-1 and Munc-2 in mast cells results in greatly reduced degranulation accompanied with strikingly compromised expression levels and localization of syntaxin-3. This phenotype is fully rescued by wild-type Munc18 proteins but not by the K46E, E59K and K46E/E59K mutants of Munc-18 domain 1, each of which exhibits completely abolished binding to 'closed' syntaxin-3. Furthermore, knockdown of syntaxin-3 strongly impairs degranulation. Collectively, our data argue that residues Lys46 and Glu59 of Munc18 proteins are indispensable for mediating the interaction between Munc18 and closed syntaxin-3, which is essential for degranulation by chaperoning syntaxin-3. Our results also indicate that the functional contribution of these residues differs between immune cell degranulation and neuronal secretion.

Keywords: Exocytosis; Mast cell; Membrane trafficking; Munc18; SNARE; Secretion.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Exocytosis
  • Humans
  • Mast Cells / metabolism*
  • Molecular Chaperones / metabolism*
  • Munc18 Proteins / metabolism*
  • Protein Binding / genetics*
  • Qa-SNARE Proteins / metabolism*
  • Rats

Substances

  • Molecular Chaperones
  • Munc18 Proteins
  • Qa-SNARE Proteins