INVESTIGADORES
MASONE Diego Fernando
artículos
Título:
A connection between reversible tyrosine phosphorylation and SNARE complex-disassembly activity of N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor unveiled by the phosphomimetic mutant N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor-Y83E
Autor/es:
RUETE, MARÍA CELESTE; ZARELLI, VALERIA EUGENIA PAOLA; MASONE, DIEGO; DE PAOLA, MATILDE; BUSTOS, DIEGO MARTÍN; TOMES, CLAUDIA NORA
Revista:
Molecular Human Reproduction
Editorial:
Oxford University Press
Referencias:
Lugar: Oxford; Año: 2019 vol. 25 p. 344 - 358
Resumen:
N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor (NSF) disassembles fusion-incompetent cis soluble-NSF attachment protein (SNAP) receptor (SNARE) complexes making monomeric SNAREs available for subsequent trans pairing and fusion. In most cells the activity of NSF is constitutive, but in Jurkat cells and sperm, it is repressed by tyrosine phosphorylation; the phosphomimetic mutant NSF-Y83E inhibits secretion in the former. The questions addressed here are if and how the NSF mutant influences the configuration of the SNARE complex. Our model is human sperm, where the initiation of exocytosis (acrosome reaction) de-represses the activity of NSF through protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B)-mediated dephosphorylation. We developed a fluorescence microscopy-based method to show that capacitation increased, and challenging with an acrosome reaction inducer decreased, the number of cells with tyrosine phosphorylated PTP1B substrates in the acrosomal domain. Results from bioinformatic and biochemical approaches using purified recombinant proteins revealed that NSF-Y83E bound PTP1B and thereupon inhibited its catalytic activity. Mutant NSF introduced into streptolysin O-permeabilized sperm impaired cis SNARE complex disassembly, blocking the acrosome reaction; subsequent addition of PTP1B rescued exocytosis. We propose that NSF-Y83E prevents endogenous PTP1B from dephosphorylating sperm NSF, thus maintaining NSF´s activity in a repressed mode and the SNARE complex unable to dissociate. The contribution of this paper to the sperm biology field is the detection of PTP1B substrates, one of them likely being NSF, whose tyrosine phosphorylation status varies during capacitation and the acrosome reaction. The contribution of this paper to the membrane traffic field is to have generated direct evidence that explains the dominant-negative role of the phosphomimetic mutant NSF-Y83E.