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Exocytosis and EndocytosisNicholas H. Batteya, Nicola C. Jamesa, Andrew J. Greenlandb, and Colin Brownleeca Department of Horticulture, School of Plant Sciences, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading RG6 6AS, United Kingdom b ZENECA Agrochemicals, Jealott's Hill Research Station, Bracknell RG42 6ET, United Kingdom c Marine Biological Association, Citadel Hill, Plymouth PL1 2PB, United Kingdom Correspondence to: Nicholas H. Battey, n.h.battey{at}reading.ac.uk (E-mail), 44-118-9750630 (fax)
Exocytosis is a general term used to denote vesicle fusion at the plasma membrane, and it is the final step in the secretory pathway that typically begins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), passes through the Golgi apparatus, and ends at the outside of the cell. Endocytosis refers to the recovery of vesicles from the plasma membrane. Exocytotic vesicle fusion involves the coalescence of vesicle and plasma membranes and allows the so-called fusion pore to form. The fusion pore is a channel that passes through the vesicle and plasma membranes and allows delivery of the vesicle contents to the extracellular compartment. Docking is the pro-cess by which the exocytotic vesicle is fixed beneath the plasma membrane before fusion. It is generally believed to involve molecular recognition between vesicle and plasma membrane and is therefore one aspect of vesicle targeting. Another kind of targeting can be provided by the cytoskeletal proteins that move vesicles around the cell. Sorting is a term that can be applied to vesicles, in which case it simply describes the consequences of targeting. Sorting has a more useful and distinct meaning when applied to vesicle contents: these contents vary according to the destination of the vesicle and the state of differentiation of the cell. Sorting of contents can occur in the ER or Golgi or post-Golgi compartments, as can processing, in which polysaccharides or proteins are modified enzymatically into their mature form, ready for delivery.
The problem in discussing exocytosis and endocytosis is deciding where to start and where to finish: it is difficult to consider vesicle fusion without docking, docking without targeting, and targeting without sorting. Similarly, to stop at the point of vesicle retrieval (perhaps only microseconds after its fusion) is arbitrary, if only because the subsequent journey can involve recycling (see, e.g.,
In this review, we follow the secretory vesicle on its journey from the Golgi apparatus to the plasma membrane and discuss the factors that control its docking, fusion, and recycling there. We emphasize the relatively new results from plant cells but place these against a background of data from animal cells and yeast, in which more is known. One interesting feature of exocytosis in plants is its Ca2+ sensitivity, and we discuss the significance of this in relation to the known importance of Ca2+ as an intracellular regulator. Finally, we consider key areas for future study that will lead to a more complete understanding of the role that the regulation of exocytosis and endocytosis plays in plant development.
From the Golgi Apparatus to the Plasma Membrane Docking Zone
The commonly held view is that secretory vesicles are delivered to their target membrane by the cytoskeleton. In animal cells, this delivery role is effected by microtubules (
Although the cytoskeletal proteins provide a mechanism for vesicle delivery, it cannot be assumed that they determine where vesicles dock and fuse; that information, according to a hypothesis with strong support in animals and yeast, resides on the vesicle and target membranes themselves (
Maturation and Processing in Secretory Vesicles
Protein Processing
Other plant subtilases, such as AG12 from Alnus glutinosa (
Proteins that have a putative protective function often exemplify post-Golgi processing and maturation (
Polysaccharide Processing
Perhaps the most impressive examples of post-Golgi maturation of polysaccharides are found in the Prasinophycean algae. Figure 2 shows that in these plants, the scales that ultimately coat the plasma and flagellar membranes are synthesized in the Golgi apparatus as macromolecular structures and then delivered to the cell surface by exocytosis. In Pyramimonas, the scale reservoir is a post-Golgi compartment that contains a range of different scale types (Figure 2) and appears to sort and layer the scales in preparation for their release at the plasma membrane. The scale reticulum in Scherffelia is believed to play a similar role, sorting the pentagonal and rod scales that will coat the flagellar surface into separate vesicles for exocytosis (
Arrival: Docking at the Plasma Membrane
Work on the product of the Arabidopsis KNOLLE gene provides evidence in plants that docking at the plasma membrane also is dependent on the formation of SNARE complexes. Mutations in KNOLLE affect early development of the Arabidopsis seedling so that the radial patterning of tissue layers is disrupted (
Although the work with KNOLLE indicates that SNARE function in exocytosis is conserved during cell plate formation in plants, a number of questions remain. A pressing issue is to identify the v-SNAREs (and potentially other t-SNAREs) that are required for vesicle docking at the cell plate so as to confirm that the animal and yeast docking models apply in this process. Based on a mutant phenotype, the product of the KEULE gene has been proposed as a candidate for a v-SNARE (
Two other types of protein, NSF (N-ethylmaleimidesensitive factor) and SNAPs (soluble NSF-attachment proteins), are important in docking and fusion of vesicles in animal and yeast cells (
GTPases from the Ras superfamily, termed Ypt in yeast and Rab in mammals, are proteins that play a crucial regulatory role in the docking/fusion process. Sec4p is the Ypt member that regulates vesicle fusion at the plasma membrane of S. cerevisiae (
Rho-type GTPases are another group in the Ras superfamily. They have functions in a range of cell biological processes, but of particular relevance are the roles of the Rho-related Cdc42p and the Ras-related Bud1p in polarized growth in S. cerevisiae (
The Ca2+ Connection: Controlling Exocytotic Membrane Fusion
Because fusion of membranes can only occur once they have been brought into close proximity, the first potential role for Ca2+ is the regulation of the process that draws the docked vesicle membrane into immediate apposition with the plasma membrane. Although the mechanism that underlies such membrane juxtaposition is not fully understood, work on the mode of membrane fusion that promotes viral infection provides the clearest pointer. The influenza virus is a very efficient machine for cell invasion, an essential component of which is the ability to cross the plasma membrane. The viral hemagglutinin protein forms a scaffold that draws the virus and host cell membranes together and promotes their fusion (
Evidence from a variety of sources suggests that in animal cells, membrane fusion may involve a similar scaffold mechanism (
Ca2+-dependent activator protein for secretion (CAPS) is required for Ca2+-triggered exocytosis from permeabilized animal neuroendocrine PC12 cells (
Recently, the sequence of a tomato gene (CLB1) was published (
Once the fusion pore has formed, vesicular contents can be released to the extracellular matrix. In animal cells, fusion pore opening can be transient, with content release followed very rapidly by pore closure (Figure 3;
Recovering Excess Membrane
Despite the evidence that membrane recycling occurs in plants, there has been considerable doubt until recently whether the underlying mechanisms involve vesicle endocytosis. These uncertainties arise mainly from consideration of the energetics of vesicle recycling in the turgid cell (e.g.,
Evidence for Endocytosis in Plants
In animal cells and yeast, endocytosis occurs via clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs) that act in plasma membrane recovery and in cycling of vesicles in the endomembrane system. CCVs are characterized by the presence of protrusions of clathrin on the cytoplasmic surface (
Coated pits and CCVs have a well-conserved complex of polypeptides specific to their cytoplasmic surface. Clathrin polypeptides form the outer (cytosolic-facing) layer of the coat and comprise three heavy chains and three light chains that assemble to form triskelions (reviewed in
Another essential element of the inner region of the vesicle coat in CCVs is the adaptins. In animals and yeast, these heterotetrameric adaptor proteins are involved in attaching to the membrane and can interact with membrane-spanning receptors. Both Golgi- and plasma membranespecific adaptor complexes exist in animals and yeast. Plant counterparts are considerably less well characterized, but current evidence supports a role for
A variety of other molecules is associated with the endocytotic pathway in animals and yeast, and some of these molecules are beginning to be described in plant systems. The GTP-binding protein dynamin is required for rapid endocytosis coupled to exocytosis in adrenal chromaffin cells (
Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis
Quantification of Endocytosis
Taken together, the above evidence amply suggests that membrane recycling can occur rapidly (within seconds to minutes) during osmotically induced cell volume changes. This rate of recycling may be faster than during normal growth and secretion, suggesting that the usual membrane cycling pathway may be bypassed. Observation of vesicular material extruded from the plasma membrane after pollen tube plasmolysis (
The simultaneous monitoring of exocytosis and endocytosis through measurements of cell capacitance and internalization of FM1-43, respectively, has been achieved with adrenal chromaffin cells (
Our initial interest in exocytosis was triggered by the need to find mechanisms that underlie the pronounced effects of Ca2+ on plant cell development (
Those cells of most interest for understanding exocytosis and endocytosis are often highly differentiated and difficult subjects for biochemical analysis (e.g., the honeysuckle nectary or Mimulus glandular hairs; see Figure 1). The availability of a range of (labeled) protein probes whose trafficking pathways are known would provide the means to understand plasma membrane dynamics in such specialized cells, as is indicated by success in studies on bone-resorbing osteoclasts in animals, where the plasma membrane is divided into domains that are maintained by directed vesicle trafficking along the endocytotic pathway (
The full range of SNAREs and other proteins that regulate vesicle docking and fusion at the plant plasma membrane needs to be identified. Confirmation that SNAREs are important in exocytosis may be obtainable by using the clostridial toxins, such as tetanus and botulinum toxins, in patch clamp experiments. These toxins are specific proteases that cleave syntaxin and SNAP-25 and synaptobrevin in human nerve terminals (
Interestingly, it seems that secreted polysaccharide may play an important role in perpetuating polarized growth. Thus, the inhibitor of Golgi secretion brefeldin A has been shown to disrupt polarized secretion of a rhizoid-specific polysaccharide in polarizing Fucus zygotes (
We thank Ian Moore (Oxford University, UK) for Rab guidance and for comments on the manuscript; Gerhard Thiel (Göttingen University, Germany) for comments on the manuscript; James Carew and Paul Le Mière (Department of Horticulture, University of Reading) for help with Figure 1 and for drawing the diagrams in Figure 3 and Figure 4; Jean Whiterow (Department of Horticulture, University of Reading) for her invaluable help in preparing the manuscript; and the United Kingdom Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), the Leverhulme Trust, the University of Reading Research Endowment Trust Fund, the Marine Biological Association, UK, and ZENECA Agrochemicals for financial support of the authors' labs. N.C.J. acknowledges the support of an Industrial CASE studentship from the BBSRC.
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