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First published online 9 December 2008
doi: 10.1242/jcs.036673
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Research Article |
Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt Brain Institute, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: kendal.broadie{at}vanderbilt.edu)
Accepted 2 October 2008
| Summary |
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Key words: Syntaxin, Shibire, Synaptic vesicle, Endosome, Neuromuscular junction, Garland cell, Primary neuron culture
| Introduction |
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We report here the characterization of a new player with a specific role in bulk endocytosis; Rolling blackout (RBO; also known as EFR3, Pho eighty-five requiring 3 and STMA). We previously reported that conditional temperature sensitive (TS) rbots mutants manifest complete blindness and paralysis within minutes upon shift to restrictive temperature (Huang et al., 2004
; Huang et al., 2006
). RBO is a well-conserved integral plasma-membrane protein and predicted lipase (Vijayakrishnan and Broadie, 2006
). In rbots brain, phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2] accumulates and diacylglycerol (DAG) is concomitantly reduced within minutes upon shift to restrictive temperature. However, the exact RBO lipase substrate in the PtdIns(4,5)P2-DAG pathway has not been identified, despite exhaustive attempts (Vijayakrishnan and Broadie, 2006
). Our previous data pointed to RBO function in SV exocytosis, with vesicles accumulating within minutes at the restrictive temperature, being arrested at the docking stage at presynaptic active zones (Huang et al., 2006
). Crucial to this model, we showed that rbots displays a strong synergistic behavioral interaction with the syntaxin-1A TS allele syx3-69 (T254I) (Littleton et al., 1998
). Double-homozygous mutants paralyze at a lower temperature than either single mutant, suggesting that RBO and Syntaxin-1A act synergistically in SV exocytosis. However, a recently published analysis of syx3-69 revealed that this allele is in fact a dominant positive mutation causing elevated Syntaxin-1A function (Lagow et al., 2007
). This revelation forced us to question our hypothesis. We have therefore since performed many additional studies, with better tools and in multiple cell types, to assess the functional requirements for RBO in both neurons and non-neuronal cells.
In this study, we performed FM1-43 dye cycling assays both at the well-characterized NMJ and the novel setting of central synapses in primary culture. Both synapse classes display severely defective SV endocytosis in rbots mutants. Nevertheless, ultrastructural analyses of synaptic boutons at rest and post-stimulation show an increase in SV density and accumulation of docked SVs in rbots synapses, similar to the results obtained in adult dorsal longitudinal muscle (DLM) synapse (Huang et al., 2006
), posing us a conundrum. We therefore combined FM-dye-uptake experiments with photoconversion electron microscopy to reveal that loss of RBO function causes a specific blockade in the activity-dependent bulk-endocytosis generation of endosomes. We performed parallel fluid-phase tracer-uptake studies in non-neuronal Garland cells, a well-established constitutive endocytosis assay system (Dermaut et al., 2005
; Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
). These studies similarly showed a complete arrest in macropinocytosis in rbots mutants, comparable to the blockade that we observed in shibirets (shits; Dynamin) mutants. Tracer ultrastructure studies in Garland cells also showed a complete loss of tracer uptake into endosomes. Together, these results show that RBO is specifically required for the bulk endocytosis pathway only, in both neuronal synapses and non-neuronal cells.
| Results |
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In protocol 2 (Fig. 1A), FM dye was loaded in the restrictive 37°C condition and then shifted to permissive 25°C for 10 minutes prior to applying the second depolarizing stimulus. Under these conditions, syx3-69 continued to load similarly to wild type, showing no requirement for Syntaxin-1A in endocytosis (Fig. 1C,D, right). By contrast, rbots showed a very significant (P<0.0001) impairment (Fig. 1C). The mutant took up
50% less dye than wild-type controls [fluorescence intensities: OR, 79.07±1.28 (n=9); rbots, 40.63±3.07 (n=11)] (Fig. 1D, right). A wild-type copy of rbo in the mutant background completely rescued this loading defect [77.01±1.81 (n=6)] (Fig. 2). The rbots;syx3-69 double mutant also showed a severe defect in FM endocytosis; however, the defect at 37°C and 25°C was comparable, suggesting that the interaction was already maximal at the permissive temperature [rbots;syx3-69, 32.18±2.85 (n=8), compared with OR; P<0.0001] (Fig. 1D, right). Because the double mutant showed such poor loading at 2 minutes, a longer 5-minute load was used to determine whether unloading was defective (Fig. 1C, bottom panel). The amount of dye loaded remained significantly reduced (P=0.0064), but the relative amount of dye unloaded was not significantly different (P=0.10) in the double mutant compared with wild type (OR, 43.64%; rbots;syx3-69, 55.63%). Together, these data indicate that RBO has a crucial role in endocytosis that is exacerbated by the elevated SV cycling driven by the syx3-69 mutant.
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RBO is required for endocytosis in central brain synapses
There appeared to be a disparity between our previous results at the adult DLM synapse, which suggest a role for RBO in SV exocytosis (Huang et al., 2006
), and our new results at the larval NMJ synapse. Consistently, rbots at restrictive temperature displays a total blockade of neurotransmission within 3 minutes at the adult DLM synapse, whereas there is no functional block at the larval NMJ (Huang et al., 2006
). One possible explanation is that RBO displays a developmental-stage-specific (larval vs adult) or synapse-type-specific differential requirement. To test these possibilities, we wished to perform comparable FM1-43 experiments in a range of synapses. The DLM synapse is not accessible for FM dye assays (Beramendi et al., 2007
). We therefore turned to primary neuronal cultures derived from the late-stage pupal brain, using methods pioneered by Jiang et al. (Jiang et al., 2005
). This technique gives excellent access to a large set of diverse central brain synapses (Figs 3 and 4).
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55-70 hours after puparium formation), RBO expression was clearly visible in the brain, where the protein is tightly restricted to the synaptic neuropil (data not shown). In individual disassociated brain neurons at 6 days in vitro (DIV), anti-GFP labeling similarly showed clear RBO expression (Fig. 3A). In neurons that were double-labeled with the presynaptic marker anti-Bruchpilot (BRP), an overlapping punctate pattern was observed, very similar to that reported by Oh et al. (Oh et al., 2008
It has been recently shown that these primary-culture neurons develop mature electrophysiological properties, express ligand-gated neurotransmitter receptors and form functional synaptic contacts indicative of a functional SV-release machinery (Campusano et al., 2007
; Jiang et al., 2005
; Su and O'Dowd, 2003
). However, to the best of our knowledge, presynaptic-vesicle cycling has not been directly demonstrated in this system (Kuppers-Munther et al., 2004
). We therefore next sought to determine whether the presumed synaptic varicosities along axonal processes take up and release FM dye in a depolarization-dependent manner. Neurons were labeled with the membrane marker CD8-GFP, to reveal varicosities, and synaptic markers, including anti-Synapsin (Fig. 4A). FM1-43 dye cycling was stimulated with depolarizing high-[K+] saline, as was performed at the NMJ synapse. FM dye was taken into the stimulated axonal varicosities (Fig. 4B, load). Following a second depolarizing stimulus, the loaded FM dye was effectively released again (Fig. 4B, unload). Neurons were labeled with FM1-43, imaged live and subsequently fixed and stained for RBO and synaptic markers such as CSP (Fig. 4C). Active synapses clearly localized RBO with other synaptic markers. Quantification of the percentage of BRP- or CSP-positive synapses that co-express RBO showed 93.09±2.31% and 85.48±3.36% overlap, respectively (Fig. 4D). Taken together, these data show that RBO is localized to functional presynaptic varicosities.
We therefore performed FM1-43 dye imaging studies to examine the role of RBO in SV cycling in central synapses. To test the restrictive condition, cultured control and rbots neurons were incubated for 10 minutes at 37°C in Ca2+-free saline, after which a 45-second pulse of FM1-43 was applied in depolarizing high-[K+] saline (Fig. 5). In wild-type (OR) neurons, some cell-body dye loading was evident, but most of the dye was endocytosed into the synaptic varicosities along axon processes (Fig. 5A,B, right, arrows). By sharp contrast, rbots neurons displayed greatly reduced endocytosis. The majority of mutant neurons loaded poorly, with faintly detectable fluorescent puncta (Fig. 5C), and a subset showed almost no detectable loading (Fig. 5D). A wild-type copy of rbo in the mutant background rescued dye loading (Fig. 5E), proving that the rbo mutation is responsible for this endocytosis defect. To quantify this phenotype, culture fields were selected blind to fluorescence using Nomarski optics and the number of FM1-43-loaded synaptic puncta per 20-µm length of axonal process was then counted and calculated as the percentage of total varicosities. This blind quantification showed a very highly significant (P<0.0001) decrease in dye loading in rbots mutants compared with control (OR, 80.25±3.74; rbots, 39.48±3.68; and rescue, 77.37±2.66) (Fig. 5F). These results demonstrate that a strikingly similar rbots endocytosis defect is shared between larval neuromuscular synapses and pupal central brain synapses. We therefore set out to further investigate the basis of this endocytosis requirement.
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To precisely characterize the defect in rbots mutants, we performed ultrastructural analyses (Fig. 7). Garland cells were seen to possess tubular invaginations of the plasma membrane extending
3 µM into the interior (labyrinthine channels) (Fig. 7, arrows) and numerous endosomal
vacuoles (labeled a in Fig. 7). At 25°C, rbots cells appeared indistinguishable from wild-type cells in all respects (Fig. 7A). By stark contrast, dramatic endocytic changes were observed in rbots mutants following upshift for just a few minutes from 25°C to restrictive 37°C. The labyrinthine channels became elongated and drastically engorged in rbots at 37°C, compared with mutants at 25°C or wild type at either temperature (Fig. 7B). In the mutant, vacuolar structures developed within the engorged channels. In shits mutants at 37°C, labyrinthine channels similarly elongated and accumulated irregular pits as a result of failure to pinch off membrane from the surface (Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
; Narita et al., 1989
). These common defects suggest that this rbots phenotype arises from a block of endocytosis from labyrinthine-channel plasma membrane. At 37°C, rbots cells also contain fewer endosomal
vacuoles, and the few that are present appear enlarged and of more irregular shape (Fig. 7C). These defects are consistent with a failure to form endosomes from the labyrinthine-channel plasma membrane following acute removal of RBO function.
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Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) provides an excellent electron-microscopy tracer for endocytosis in Garland cells (Lloyd et al., 2002
). Garland cells were dissected and incubated with HRP at 25°C or following a 10-minute incubation at 37°C (Fig. 8). At permissive temperature, HRP was clearly observed in the lumen and internal membrane of peripherally located large endosomal
vacuoles in both rbots and wild-type cells (data not shown). However, when the number of endosomes was quantified, even at permissive temperature rbots cells displayed a >50% decrease in HRP-labeled endosomes (Fig. 8E). Following 10 minutes at 37°C, wild-type cells clearly endocytosed HRP tracer into
vacuoles (Fig. 8A,B, left). By sharp contrast, almost no HRP was observed in rbots endosomes (Fig. 8A,B, right), indicating a near complete block in endocytosis. The
vacuoles that were present in the mutant clearly were made under the permissive condition, as they never contained the HRP tracer. Consistent with an endocytic block, use of tannic acid (TA) as a label to impregnate membrane that was contiguous with the extracellular space, shows these labyrinthine channels to be abnormally elongated and ramified in rbots mutants compared with controls (Fig. 8C). Quantification of cell area showed no change at 25°C but a highly significant increase in rbots at 37°C (OR, 266±21 µm2; rbots, 345±33 µm2; P=0.009). Area was significantly increased in rbots mutants after the 10-minute temperature shift (25°C, 229±22 µm2; 37°C, 345±33 µm2; P=0.007) (Fig. 8D). Quantification of HRP-loaded endosomes per section shows a significant reduction in rbots at 25°C (OR, 32±1.4; rbots, 14±0.8; P=0.0001) and near complete loss at 37°C (OR, 28±6.8; rbots, 0.2±0.14; P<0.0001) (Fig. 8E). These results show that RBO is essential in the endocytosis mechanism that generates endosomes.
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RBO is required for bulk endocytosis formation of endosomes at the synapse
The role of endosome trafficking at the synapse has long been controversial (Heuser and Reese, 1973
; Takei et al., 1996
; Teng et al., 2007
). Based on the insights derived from the Garland-cell analyses, we formed the hypothesis that RBO might have a select function in a subset of the endocytosis pathways, specifically the bulk endocytosis that forms endosomes. The functional defects observed at the larval NMJ based on our FM imaging studies (Figs 1 and 2) and our previous electrophysiological studies (Huang et al., 2006
) also appear consistent with a role for RBO in the bulk-endocytosis pathway. To test this hypothesis, we performed ultrastructural experiments at the NMJ synapse, at rest and following stimulation (Fig. 9), and also using FM1-43 photoconversion to track different endocytosis pathways (Fig. 10).
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Synaptic ultrastructure was next assayed following depolarizing stimulation at 37°C [10- or 20-minute incubation with 60 mM [K+] saline] (Fig. 9B). This condition is known to place a high demand on the SV cycle, driving high rates of exocytosis and endocytosis (see Figs 1 and 2). Stimulation eliminated the overall accumulation of SVs in rbots mutants, but the elevated clustered and docked vesicle pools persisted under these conditions of intense demand (Fig. 9B,C). The number of clustered vesicles remained significantly elevated (OR, 10.5±0.60; rbots, 16.6±1.1; P<0.01) and the number of docked vesicles also remained slightly greater (OR, 1.7±0.26; rbots, 2.1±0.23). Importantly, as is characteristic of endocytic mutants of the direct SV pathway (Gonzalez-Gaitan and Jackle, 1997
; Poodry and Edgar, 1979
; Verstreken et al., 2003
), significant vesicle depletion did not occur. The striking effect of high-[K+] stimulation is the massive production of large (>60 nm) cisternae – endosomal-like organelles in control boutons (Fig. 9B, arrows). Although these structures exist in rbots mutants at permissive temperatures, as expected because RBO is functional, stimulation in the absence of RBO function completely failed to induce the production of more cisternae (Fig. 9B, right). After 10 minutes at 37°C, wild-type synapses produced nearly fourfold more cisternae (at rest, 4.4±1.3; stimulated, 15.1±2.4), whereas rbots synapses did not display any activity-dependent cisternae production (at rest, 5.3±0.84; stimulated, 3.25±0.56) (Fig. 9D). These results suggest that RBO is essential for stimulus-induced production of endosomal-like cisternae.
The FM-dye-uptake defects reported above are presumably due to the loss of dye internalization specifically within these cisternae, produced by bulk endocytosis from the plasma membrane under conditions of intense demand (Heerssen et al., 2008
; Teng et al., 2007
). To test this hypothesis, we performed FM1-43-dye-uptake experiments, as above (Fig. 1), and then photoconverted the label into an electron-dense marker for viewing with electron microscopy (Fig. 10). In control synapses, recently endocytosed dye was observed in two locations: (1) small (<40-nm diameter) SVs (arrows in Fig. 10A, left) and (2) large (>60-nm diameter) endosomes (asterisk in Fig. 10A, left). By sharp contrast, rbots synaptic boutons at 37°C showed all endocytosed FM dye in small SVs, with no dye being present in endosomes (Fig. 10A, right). We quantified the number of electron-dense labeled SVs (Fig. 10B) and endosomes (Fig. 10C). Following 10 minutes at 37°C with high-demand stimulation, rbots boutons contained significantly more labeled SVs than controls (OR, 67.9±15.2; rbots, 130.1±16.3; P<0.01) (Fig. 10B). Under the same conditions, rbots boutons contained essentially no labeled endosomes, with only a couple examples observed among all the sections assayed. The result is a very highly significant (P<0.0001) loss of endosome production in the mutant (OR, 5.8±0.8; rbots, 0.4±0.2) (Fig. 10C). Thus, RBO is specifically required for endosome formation at the synapse.
| Discussion |
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This new conclusion would seem incompatible with our earlier analyses at the adult DLM synapse (Huang et al., 2006
). Is it possible that RBO has different requirements at different places? Supporting this possibility is the fact that RBO is acutely required to maintain neurotransmission at the adult DLM synapse, with a rbots block in <3 minutes, but shows no such role at the larval NMJ synapse, even after rbots is at the restrictive temperature for >30 minutes (Huang et al., 2006
). To determine whether RBO function is stage-specific (larval vs adult), or synapse-specific (e.g. central vs peripheral), we performed FM assays on pupal central brain primary cultured neurons, which contain many classes of synapse (Campusano et al., 2007
; Jiang et al., 2005
; Su and O'Dowd, 2003
). In central synapses, RBO clearly localized to synaptic varicosities, together with synaptic markers such as CSP, Synapsin and Bruchpilot. These RBO-positive varicosities were clearly presynaptic specializations, which took up and released FM dye in a depolarization-dependent manner. In rbots neurons there was a clear, temperature-dependent requirement for RBO in endocytosis. Although some mutant synapses were able to load dye, and a few showed strong labeling, many failed to load any dye at detectable levels. Overall, there was a highly significant reduction in FM endocytosis in rbots synapses, strongly supporting a conserved endocytosis function for RBO in different developmental stages and classes of synapse. Nevertheless, the fact that some rbots neurons showed comparatively normal FM-dye cycling and others showed none might signify that some neuron classes are more sensitive to disruption of RBO function. This is the first study ever to perform FM assays in a brain culture system or analyze genetic mutants in culture in the Drosophila system. Thus, these analyses represent a significant technical advance.
To dissect the endocytic RBO mechanism, we first turned to the large, accessible Garland cells, which maintain a high, constitutive rate of vesicular endocytosis (Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
; Narita et al., 1989
). In rbots cells, there was a severe decrease in Texas-red-conjugated avidin uptake, just as the synapse shows a decrease in FM-dye uptake. Ultrastructural analysis reveals a dramatic enlargement and vacuolization of plasma-membrane labyrinthine channels and loss of endosomes. Use of HRP as an endocytic tracer revealed a defect of plasma-membrane endocytosis into endosomes. Formation of tracer-labeled endosomes was already somewhat impaired at 25°C and was blocked at the 37°C restrictive temperature. A similar block in uptake was observed in the shibirets Dynamin mutant, consistent with a similar endocytic defect (Lloyd et al., 2002
; Narita et al., 1989
). Moreover, enlarged
vacuoles appeared in rbots cells, similar to the phenotype of the hepatocyte growth factor-regulated tyrosine kinase substrate (HRS) mutant (Lloyd et al., 2002
), which is defective in endosomal membrane invagination. On the basis of ultrastructural analyses, RBO function appears to be required for membrane curvature and/or budding during this endocytic mechanism, prior to Dynamin function.
In several neuronal systems, strong stimulation drives the formation of endosomes, taken in from the plasma membrane by an activity-dependent bulk endocytosis (Holt et al., 2003
; Royle and Lagnado, 2003
). In synaptosomal preparations and cultured hippocampal neurons, fluid-phase tracers such as HRP localize to these structures, showing that they are an immediate product of the synaptic-terminal-surface endosomal system (Leenders et al., 2002
; Takei et al., 1996
). In the Drosophila NMJ synapse, high-[K+] depolarization for just 10 minutes caused a nearly fourfold increase in the number of these endosomes. Their formation was totally blocked in rbots at 37°C, revealing an absolute RBO requirement in activity-dependent endosome formation. Because no SV depletion was observed in these mutants, this suggests that RBO is specifically required in the endosome-formation pathway. The best means of testing this hypothesis was to determine whether acutely endocytosed FM dye localizes to these structures, and whether this uptake is specifically blocked in the acute absence of RBO function. We therefore performed FM1-43-dye labeling for just 2 minutes with depolarizing high-[K+] stimulation and then photoconverted the dye using photo-illumination with DAB to visualize the internalized dye ultrastructurally (Harata et al., 2001
; Schikorski and Stevens, 2001
). To our knowledge, this powerful technique has never before been used in Drosophila. Dye was observed in small SVs that were internalized by CME, in both controls and rbots mutants, indicating that CME is not dependent on RBO function. By contrast, internalized dye was clearly observed in the enlarged endosomes in wild-type synapses, but is effectively never observed in rbots synapses. This argues that endosomes are formed by direct uptake from the plasma membrane during strong stimulation and that this form of uptake is specifically disrupted in the absence of RBO. Interestingly, dye that was internalized by CME in rbots was exocytosed, whereas dye that is internalized by bulk endocytosis following clathrin inactivation is not re-released (Heerssen et al., 2008
). One model is that bulk endocytosis is totally RBO-dependent, but direct CME of SVs does not require RBO. In this model, a presumed increased rate of CME endocytosis is a compensatory response to the loss of bulk endocytosis in the absence of RBO function. An alternative model is that vesicles that are internalized by CME fail to fuse to form endosomes, because the fusion step requires RBO. In this model, the accumulation of small vesicles in rbots mutants would represent an arrest in the endosomal formation pathway following endocytosis.
Contrary to expectations, rbots synapses actually showed a higher SV density than controls, even after 20 minutes at restrictive temperature. We previously reported a similar phenotype at the adult DLM synapse (Huang et al., 2006
). In both larval and adult synapses, there was an increase in clustered and/or docked vesicle pools at the active zone, a phenotype always interpreted as an exocytosis block. However, it has been suggested that SV endocytosis and exocytosis can both occur at the active zone (Koenig and Ikeda, 1999
; Koenig et al., 1998
), so it is possible that SVs accumulated at this location also represent a defect in SV fission or maturation. Consistent with this idea, we clearly observed photoconverted FM dye in vesicles under the T-bar active zone. However, given the limited temporal resolution with our 2-minute loading protocol, it is possible that these vesicles were already docked ready to undergo exocytosis (e.g. assuming a SV cycle of <30 seconds). Note also that FM assays showed comparable levels of SV exocytosis in rbots and syx3-69 mutants relative to wild-type controls. How does a synapse maintain exocytosis with impaired endocytosis in the absence of RBO function? Why are SVs not depleted, but actually slightly accumulated in the mutant synapse? The reason presumably is that bulk retrieval plays only a small facilitatory role in acute synaptic function, as has been established at the Drosophila NMJ (Heerssen et al., 2008
). Indeed, direct CME of SVs appeared enhanced in rbots and might partially compensate for loss of SVs from the RBO-dependent endosomal pathway. These results suggest a delicate balance between CME and bulk-endocytosis mechanisms under conditions of high demand, and possibly the ability for crosstalk among different endocytosis mechanisms.
Our previous work has shown that RBO functions in PLC-dependent PtdIns(4,5)P2-DAG signaling (Huang et al., 2004
). Consistently, the local turnover of phosphoinositides by PLC and PI3-kinase activities has been suggested to regulate membrane curvature and related processes during bulk-membrane endocytosis (Araki et al., 2006
). We have proposed that RBO might modify PtdIns(4,5)P2 acyl side chains, making it inaccessible to subsequent conversion to other phospholipid species, which may in turn be required for bulk endocytosis. RBO is thus hypothesized to synthesize or locally concentrate phospholipid species at foci, mediating nucleation of membrane retrieval. An alternative model is that endocytic defects could be due to decreased DAG levels in rbots mutants (Huang et al., 2004
). DAG regulates ADP ribosylation factor (ARF) in vesicle budding (Antonny et al., 1997
). DAG also activates PKC, UNC-13, RasGrp and chimaerins (Yang and Kazanietz, 2003
). DAG kinase
(DGK
), which converts DAG to phosphatidic acid, has also been implicated in plasma-membrane endocytosis (Kawasaki et al., 2008
). In the absence of RBO function, these lipids might be absent or aberrantly distributed in the plasma membrane and therefore unable to trigger membrane invagination. Our on-going studies are aimed at addressing the mechanistic interaction between RBO and phospholipids and/or DAG in the plasma membrane.
| Materials and Methods |
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Immunocytochemistry
RBO-eGFP imaging was performed on rbo2/rbo2; rbo-egfp/rbo-egfp transgenic rescue animals (Huang et al., 2004
; Huang et al., 2006
). Coverslips were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 30 minutes, washed three times in PBS with 0.1% Triton-X (PBS-TX) and blocked in PBS-TX containing 2.5% BSA for 1 hour. The following antibodies were used overnight at 4°C: anti-GFP 5450 (1:250, goat, Abcam), anti-Synapsin (Syn; 1:100 mouse, DSHB), anti-Bruchpilot (BRP; 1:100, mouse, provided by Hugo Bellen, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX) and anti-CSP (1:200, mouse, provided by Konrad Zinsmaier, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ). Secondary antibodies conjugated to TritC or Alexa-Fluor-488 were used at 1:250 (Jackson Immunolabs, Molecular Probes). Images were captured with a Zeiss 510 Meta confocal microscope and processed with Adobe Photoshop CS8.
FM-dye imaging assays
FM1-43-dye loading and unloading assays were performed on wandering third instar NMJ as previously described (Fergestad and Broadie, 2001
). Briefly, FM1-43 dye (10 µM; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was applied in 60 mM depolarizing K+ saline in 1.8 mM Ca2+ for 2 minutes at 25°C. Preparations were subsequently washed in Ca2+-free saline before imaging. For restrictive-temperature experiments, preparations were incubated for 10 minutes at 37°C and then a 2-minute pulse of FM1-43 dye was applied in 60 mM K+ saline. Samples were then washed at 37°C in Ca2+-free saline and imaged. To assay exocytosis, loaded terminals were stimulated for 2 minutes with 60 mM K+ saline, either at 25°C or 37°C. Equidistant confocal slices were scanned from muscle 6/7 NMJs, four NMJs per animal, two each from segments A3 and A4. Quantification was done using ImageJ (NIH), with average pixel intensity for the entire z-stack 3D bouton determined. Mean pixel intensity was calculated for ten boutons per NMJ and averaged across each animal (n = number of animals). Pupal neurons were cultured based on the protocol described by Jiang et al. (Jiang et al., 2005
). Cultures at 5-8 days were incubated with FM1-43 dye for 45 seconds, either at 25°C or following 10 minutes at 37°C. Synapse fields were selected using DIC optics, with 20 fields imaged per coverslip. For quantification, the total number of DIC punctae and number of dye-loaded punctae were each counted per 20-µm distance of axonal processes using LSM software (n = number of coverslips). A 63x, 0.95W water-immersion objective on a Zeiss LSM 510 confocal microscope was used for image acquisition.
Garland-cell tracer-endocytosis assays
Endocytic tracer assays were performed on Garland cells as described (Dermaut et al., 2005
). Briefly, Garland cells were dissected from wandering third instars in Schneider's culture medium (Gibco) and incubated at 25°C or 37°C for 10 minutes. Texas-red-conjugated avidin (0.2 mg/ml; Sigma Aldrich) was applied for 5 minutes, followed by fixation with 4% paraformaldehyde for 15 minutes. Quantification of tracer uptake was done using ImageJ (NIH). An outline of the cell was drawn and total fluorescence-intensity measured. A second circle was similarly drawn in the cell interior. Subtracting this value from the whole-cell value generated the peri-membrane fluorescence. Imaging was done using a Zeiss LSM 510 Meta confocal microscope.
Electron microscopy
Analyses of NMJ-synapse and Garland-cell ultrastructures were performed as reported previously (Pan et al., 2004
; Rohrbough et al., 2007
). Briefly, for stimulated and unstimulated assays, dissected wandering third instars were incubated at 37°C in 60 mM K+ saline with 1.8 mM Ca2+ or Ca2+-free saline, respectively. Specimens were fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde for 1 hour, washed in PBS for 10 minutes and transferred into 1% OsO4 in dH20 for 1 hour. Preparations were stained en bloc in 1% aqueous uranyl acetate for 1 hour, dehydrated using a graded series of ethanol followed by propylene oxide for 30 minutes and then embedded in araldite. Ultrathin (<60 nm) sections were obtained using a Leica Ultracut UCT 54 ultramicrotome and were transferred to formvar-coated slot grids placed on Synaptiek grid-sticks to be blocked stained with lead nitrate and uranyl acetate. Sections were imaged using a Phillips CM10 TEM at 80V with images from a 2-megapixel AMT CCD camera.
TA-impregnation and HRP-uptake methods
Following the method of Kosaka and Ikeda (Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
), TA was used to mark internalized lumens continuous to the extracellular space. After the osmification step in the transmission electron microscopy methods above, specimens were rinsed twice for 5 minutes with 1% TA and then immersed for 1 hour with agitation at room temperature. HRP in modified Bodenstein saline (0.7% HRP solution) was used to assay endocytotic activity in Garland cells (Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
). Garland cells were incubated in HRP solution for 10 minutes, either at 25°C or 37°C. The cells were then fixed in 1.6% paraformaldehyde, 2% glutaraldehyde in PBS for 20 minutes. Samples were rinsed overnight in 0.1 M phosphate buffer at 4°C and then incubated in 0.15% 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (DAB, DEKO) for 20 minutes at room temperature. All samples were further processed for electron microscopy using the standard protocol, as described above.
FM1-43 photoconversion
FM1-43 dye loading was done as described above and then preparations were fixed for 5 minutes in 1.6% paraformaldehyde/2% glutaraldehyde in PBS. Samples were washed for 20 minutes in Tris-buffered saline (TBS, pH 7.5) and then incubated in 0.15% 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (DAB, DEKO) in TBS for 5 minutes. The DAB solution was refreshed and samples were then illuminated using a 100 W mercury lamp, a 63x 0.95W objective and a standard FITC filter for 20 minutes. The photoconverted samples (see Fig. 10A, inset) were post-fixed overnight in 2% glutaraldehyde at 4°C. Samples were placed in osmium (1% OsO4) at room temperature for 30 minutes, washed and then placed in uranyl acetate at room temperature for 30 minutes. Samples were dehydrated through ethanol and then propylene oxide for 30 minutes, placed in a 1:1 ratio of propylene oxide and Spurr's resin for 30 minutes and finally for 1 hour in pure resin in a vacuum oven. Samples were taken out and further dissected so that only muscles 6 and 7 were embedded for thin sectioning. Ultrathin (<60 nm) sections were cut on a Leica ultra cut UCT microtome. Samples were then processed for electron microscopy using the standard protocol, as described above.
| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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