Neuronal SNARE complex: A protein folding system with intricate protein-protein interactions, and its common neuropathological hallmark, SNAP25

2019 ◽  
Vol 122 ◽  
pp. 196-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Srijeeb Karmakar ◽  
Laipubam Gayatri Sharma ◽  
Abhishek Roy ◽  
Anjali Patel ◽  
Lalit Mohan Pandey
2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (35) ◽  
pp. 18958-18969 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ercheng Wang ◽  
Gaoqi Weng ◽  
Huiyong Sun ◽  
Hongyan Du ◽  
Feng Zhu ◽  
...  

Enhanced sampling has been extensively used to capture the conformational transitions in protein folding, but it attracts much less attention in the studies of protein–protein recognition.


Author(s):  
Lu Sun ◽  
Tingting Fu ◽  
Dan Zhao ◽  
Hongjun Fan ◽  
Shijun Zhong

Protein-peptide interaction is crucial for various important cellular regulations, and also a basis for understanding protein-protein interactions, protein folding and peptide drug design. Due to the limited structural data obtained...


2020 ◽  
Vol 152 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald W. Holz ◽  
Mary A. Bittner

Central to the exocytotic release of hormones and neurotransmitters is the interaction of four SNARE motifs in proteins on the secretory granule/synaptic vesicle membrane (synaptobrevin/VAMP, v-SNARE) and on the plasma membrane (syntaxin and SNAP25, t-SNAREs). The interaction is thought to bring the opposing membranes together to enable fusion. An underlying motivation for this Viewpoint is to synthesize from recent diverse studies possible new insights about these events. We focus on a recent paper that demonstrates the importance of the linker region joining the two SNARE motifs of the neuronal t-SNARE SNAP25 for maintaining rates of secretion with roles for distinct segments in speeding fusion pore expansion. Remarkably, lipid-perturbing agents rescue a palmitoylation-deficient mutant whose phenotype includes slow fusion pore expansion, suggesting that protein–protein interactions have a role not only in bringing together the granule or vesicle membrane with the plasma membrane but also in orchestrating protein–lipid interactions leading to the fusion reaction. Unexpectedly, biochemical investigations demonstrate the importance of the C-terminal domain of the linker in the formation of the plasma membrane t-SNARE “acceptor” complex for synaptobrevin2. This insight, together with biophysical and optical studies from other laboratories, suggests that the plasma membrane SNARE acceptor complex between SNAP25 and syntaxin and the subsequent trans-SNARE complex with the v-SNARE synaptobrevin form within 100 ms before fusion.


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