AI Article Synopsis

  • Ca(2+) plays a crucial role in vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane, especially during regulated exocytoses, but the effects of Ca(2+) after fusion have been less understood.
  • In a study of rat alveolar type II cells, it was found that single vesicle fusion events resulted in transient localized increases in cytoplasmic calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](c)), crucial for surfactant release.
  • The research introduces the concept of Fusion-activated Ca(2+) entry (FACE), showing that this mechanism enhances localized surfactant release through Ca(2+) transients following vesicle fusion.

Article Abstract

Background: Ca(2+) is essential for vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane in virtually all types of regulated exocytoses. However, in contrast to the well-known effects of a high cytoplasmic Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](c)) in the prefusion phase, the occurrence and significance of Ca(2+) signals in the postfusion phase have not been described before.

Methodology/principal Findings: We studied isolated rat alveolar type II cells using previously developed imaging techniques. These cells release pulmonary surfactant, a complex of lipids and proteins, from secretory vesicles (lamellar bodies) in an exceptionally slow, Ca(2+)- and actin-dependent process. Measurements of fusion pore formation by darkfield scattered light intensity decrease or FM 1-43 fluorescence intensity increase were combined with analysis of [Ca(2+)](c) by ratiometric Fura-2 or Fluo-4 fluorescence measurements. We found that the majority of single lamellar body fusion events were followed by a transient (t(1/2) of decay = 3.2 s) rise of localized [Ca(2+)](c) originating at the site of lamellar body fusion. [Ca(2+)](c) increase followed with a delay of approximately 0.2-0.5 s (method-dependent) and in the majority of cases this signal propagated throughout the cell (at approximately 10 microm/s). Removal of Ca(2+) from, or addition of Ni(2+) to the extracellular solution, strongly inhibited these [Ca(2+)](c) transients, whereas Ca(2+) store depletion with thapsigargin had no effect. Actin-GFP fluorescence around fused LBs increased several seconds after the rise of [Ca(2+)](c). Both effects were reduced by the non-specific Ca(2+) channel blocker SKF96365.

Conclusions/significance: Fusion-activated Ca(2+)entry (FACE) is a new mechanism that leads to [Ca(2+)](c) transients at the site of vesicle fusion. Substantial evidence from this and previous studies indicates that fusion-activated Ca(2+) entry enhances localized surfactant release from type II cells, but it may also play a role for compensatory endocytosis and other cellular functions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2882333PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0010982PLOS

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