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Release of neuropeptides from dense core vesicles (DCVs) is essential for neuromodulation. Compared to the release of small neurotransmitters, much less is known about the mechanisms and proteins contributing to neuropeptide release. By optogenetics, behavioral analysis, electrophysiology, electron microscopy, and live imaging, we show that synapsin SNN-1 is required for cAMP-dependent neuropeptide release in Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodite cholinergic motor neurons. In synapsin mutants, behaviors induced by the photoactivated adenylyl cyclase bPAC, which we previously showed to depend on acetylcholine and neuropeptides (Steuer Costa et al., 2017), are altered like in animals with reduced cAMP. Synapsin mutants have slight alterations in synaptic vesicle (SV) distribution, however, a defect in SV mobilization was apparent after channelrhodopsin-based photostimulation. DCVs were largely affected in snn-1 mutants: DCVs were ∼30% reduced in synaptic terminals, and not released following bPAC stimulation. Imaging axonal DCV trafficking, also in genome-engineered mutants in the serine-9 protein kinase A phosphorylation site, showed that synapsin captures DCVs at synapses, making them available for release. SNN-1 co-localized with immobile, captured DCVs. In synapsin deletion mutants, DCVs were more mobile and less likely to be caught at release sites, and in non-phosphorylatable SNN-1B(S9A) mutants, DCVs traffic less and accumulate, likely by enhanced SNN-1 dependent tethering. Our work establishes synapsin as a key mediator of neuropeptide release.
In dieser Arbeit werden die Ergebnisse quantenchemischer Untersuchungen von verschiedenen Siliciumverbindungsklassen vorgestellt, die in weiten Teilen als Begleitung zu experimentellen Arbeiten durchgeführt wurden. Das erste Hauptkapitel befasst sich mit den Chloridkomplexen von Perchlorsilanen, zu denen die inversen Sandwichkomplexe und die Silafullerane mit endohedralem Gast gehören. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf den Bindungseigenschaften zwischen Ligand und Silan. Weiterhin werden thermodynamische Untersuchungen zu Aufbaureaktionen und Eigenschaften der Verbindungen vorgestellt. Mit den durchgeführten Rechnungen kann gezeigt werden, dass durch Wahl geeigneter Substituenten am Siliciumatom ein Wechsel in den Chloridkomplexen von einem hyperkoordinierten Siliciumatom hin zu einem Siliciumatom mit ausgebildeter Tetrelbindung erreicht werden kann. Bei den inversen Sandwichkomplexen sind beide Bindungsmodi möglich, von denen die Tetrelbindung die stärkere darstellt. Neben Chloridionen können hier auch Nitrile und Chlorsubstituenten am eigenen Silangerüst als Liganden fungieren. Die stärksten Tetrelbindungen können bei den endohedral funktionalisierten Silafullerankomplexen gefunden werden. Hier stellt das experimentell isolierte Strukturmotiv mit zwölf äußeren Trichlorsilylsubstituenten das thermodynamisch stabilste Substitutionsmuster dar. Im folgenden Kapitel werden die generellen physikalischen Ursachen für die beobachteten thermodynamischen Trends zwischen Perchlorsilanisomeren sowie Disproportionierungsreaktionen behandelt und ein direkter Vergleich mit Alkanhomologen angestellt. Bei den Perchlorsilanen und den meisten Homologen ist bei den untersuchten Systemen eine energetische Präferenz von verzweigteren Strukturen zu erkennen. Die Ursache hierfür liegt hauptsächlich bei stärkeren attraktiven Wechselwirkungen durch Korrelationseffekte, Hyperkonjugation sowie elektrostatische Effekte, welche stärkere repulsive Wechselwirkungen wie die Pauli-Repulsion überkompensieren. Im letzten Kapitel kommen zu den bisher behandelten Reaktionen unter Si-Cl- und Si-Si-Bindungsbeteiligung noch Reaktionen unter Si-C-Bindungsbeteiligungen hinzu. Dort werden die auch wegen ihrer Elektronentransporteigenschaften interessanten Silacyclopentadiene (Silole) hinsichtlich ihrer Isomerisierung, Dimerisierung und weiteren pericyclischen Reaktivität untersucht. Gegenüber dem verwandten Cyclopentadien zeigen diese eine deutlich erhöhte Reaktivität, was zu verschiedenen Dimerisierungsreaktionen führt, solange keine Abfangreagenzien im Überschuss zugegen sind.
Protein ubiquitination is a post-translational modification that typically involves the conjugation of ubiquitin to substrate proteins via a three-enzyme cascade and regulates a wide variety of cellular processes. Recent studies have revealed that SidE family of Legionella effectors such as SdeA catalyzes novel phosphoribosyl-linked ubiquitination (PR-ubiquitination) of serines in host substrate proteins utilizing NAD+, without the need of E2, E3. The catalytic core of SdeA comprises a mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase (mART) domain that functions to ADP-ribosylate ubiquitin, and a phosphodiesterase (PDE) domain that processes ADP-ribosylated ubiquitin and transfers the resulting phosphoribosylated ubiquitin to serines of substrates.
To date, extensive efforts have been made to study the function of SdeA and mechanism of SdeA mediated PR-ubiquitination, however, the cellular effects of this novel ubiquitination and phosphoribosylation of ubiquitin remained poorly understood. In our study, using biochemical and cell biological approaches, we explored the biological effect of phosphoribosylation of ubiquitin caused by SdeA in cells. We found that phosphoribosylated ubiquitin is not available for conventional ubiquitination, thereby phosphoribosylation of ubiquitin impairs numerous classical ubiquitination related cellular processes including mitophagy, TNF-α signaling and proteasomal degradation.
The precise temporal regulation of the functions of bacterial effectors during Legionella infection by other effectors with antagonizing activities has been well studied so far. Not surprisingly, PR-ubiquitination catalyzed by SidE family effecters is tightly controlled as well, it has been long known that effector SidJ counteracts the toxicity of SdeA to yeast cells. Interestingly, in an experiment for verifying the activity of SidJ, we found that Legionella lysate lacking SidJ was still able to remove ubiquitin from PR-ubiquitinated substrates. Using biochemical approach we identified DupA and DupB, two Legionella bacterial effectors that specifically reverse the novel serine PR-ubiquitination catalyzed by SdeA. We found that DupA and DupB possess a highly homologous PDE domain that removes ubiquitin from PR-ubiquitinated substrates by cleaving the phosphodiester bond between the phosphoribosylated-ubiquitin and serines of substrates. Catalytically deficient mutant DupA H67A strongly binds to PR-ubiquitinated proteins but not capable of cleaving PR-ubiquitin, using it as a trapping bait we identified over 180 substrates of PR-ubiquitination, including a number of ER and Golgi proteins.
In particular, we found that exogenously expressed SdeA localizes to the Golgi apparatus via its C-terminal region and disrupts the Golgi. We validated the identified potential substrates of SidE effectors and found that SdeA modifies Golgi tethering proteins GRASP55 and GRASP65. Using mass spectrometry analyses we identified four serine targets (S3, S408, S409, S449) of GRASP55 PR-ubiquitinated by SdeA in vitro. Ubiquitination of GRASP55 serine mutant in cells co-expressing SdeA or infected with Legionella was markedly decreased, compared with that of the wild-type GRASP55. In addition, with co-immunoprecipitation analyses we found that SdeA-catalyzed ubiquitination regulates the function of GRASP55. PR-ubiquitinated GRASP55 exhibited reduced self-interaction compared to unmodified GRASP55, expression of GRASP55 serine mutant in cells in part rescued Golgi damage caused by SdeA. Furthermore, our study reveals that Golgi structure disruption caused by SdeA does not result in the recruitment of Golgi membranes to the Legionella-containing vacuoles. Instead, it affects cellular secretory pathway including cytokine secretion in cells.
Taken all together, this work expands the understanding of this unconventional PR-ubiquitination catalyzed by Legionella effectors and sheds light on the functions of PR-ubiquitination by which Legionella regulates the Golgi function and secretion pathway during bacterial infection.