| Title | Docking, Not Fusion, as the Rate-Limiting Step in a SNARE-Driven Vesicle Fusion Assay |
| Publication Type | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2011 |
| Authors | Smith, EA, Weisshaar, JC |
| Journal | Biophysical Journal |
| Volume | 100 |
| Pagination | 2141-2150 |
| Date Published | May |
| Accession Number | ISI:000290360000010 |
| Keywords | bilayer fusion, Biophysics, c2b, complex, domain, liposome fusion, Mediated membrane-fusion, neuronal snares, neurotransmitter release, proteins, single-vesicle, synaptotagmin-i |
| Abstract | In vitro vesicle fusion assays that monitor lipid mixing between t-SNARE and v-SNARE vesicles in bulk solution exhibit remarkably slow fusion on the nonphysiological timescale of tens of minutes to several hours. Here, single-vesicle, fluorescence resonance energy transfer-based assays cleanly separate docking and fusion steps for individual vesicle pairs containing full-length SNAREs. Docking is extremely inefficient and is the rate-limiting step. Of importance, the docking and fusion kinetics are comparable in the two assays (one with v-SNARE vesicles tethered to a surface and the other with v-SNARE vesicles free in solution). Addition of the V-C peptide synaptobrevin-2 (syb(57-92)) increases the docking efficiency by a factor of similar to 30, but docking remains rate-limiting. In the presence of V-C peptide, the fusion step occurs on a timescale of similar to 10 s. In previous experiments involving bulk fusion assays in which the addition of synaptotagmin/Ca2+, Munc-18, or complexin accelerated the observed lipid-mixing rate, the enhancement may have arisen from the docking step rather than the fusion step. |
| Short Title | Biophys. J. |