Fusion pore regulation by cAMP/Epac2 controls cargo release during insulin exocytosis

  • Gucek, Alenka
  • Gandasi, Nikhil R
  • Omar-Hmeadi, Muhmmad
  • Bakke, Marit
  • Doskeland, Stein O.
  • Tengholm, Anders
  • Barg, Sebastian
Publication date
January 2019
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Abstract

Regulated exocytosis establishes a narrow fusion pore as initial aqueous connection to the extracellular space, through which small transmitter molecules such as ATP can exit. Co-release of polypeptides and hormones like insulin requires further expansion of the pore. There is evidence that pore expansion is regulated and can fail in diabetes and neurodegenerative disease. Here, we report that the cAMP-sensor Epac2 (Rap-GEF4) controls fusion pore behavior by acutely recruiting two pore-restricting proteins, amisyn and dynamin-1, to the exocytosis site in insulin-secreting beta-cells. cAMP elevation restricts and slows fusion pore expansion and peptide release, but not when Epac2 is inactivated pharmacologically or in Epac2(-/-) (Rapgef4(-/-...

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