Botulinum Toxin Type A Targets RhoB to Inhibit Lysophosphatidic Acid-Stimulated Actin Reorganization and Acetylcholine Release in Nerve Growth Factor-Treated PC12 Cells
- 1 September 2004
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
- Vol. 310 (3) , 881-889
- https://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.104.065318
Abstract
Botulinum toxin type A (BoNT/A) produced by Clostridium botulinum inhibits Ca2+-dependent acetylcholine (ACh) release (neuroexocytosis) at peripheral neuromuscular junctions, sometimes causing neuromuscular paralysis. This inhibitory effect is attributed to its metalloprotease activity to cleave the 25-kDa synaptosomal-associated protein, which is essential for the exocytotic machinery. However, deletion of this protein does not result in a complete block of neuroexocytosis, suggesting that botulinum-mediated inhibition may occur via another mechanism. Rho GTPases, a class of small GTP-binding proteins (G proteins), control actin cytoskeletal organization, thereby regulating a variety of cellular functions in various cells, including neuronal cells. We have shown that the G protein activator lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) triggered actin reorganization followed by Ca2+-dependent ACh release in nerve growth factor-treated PC12 cells and that BoNT/A blocked both events through degradation of RhoB by the proteasome. Overexpression of wild-type RhoB caused actin reorganization and enhanced the release of ACh by LPA to overcome toxin's inhibitory effect on actin reorganization/exocytosis stimulated by LPA, whereas overexpression of a dominant negative RhoB inhibited ACh release, regardless of LPA and/or toxin treatment. Finally, a knockdown of the RhoB gene via sequence-specific, post-transcriptional gene silencing reduced RhoB expression in PC12 cells, resulting in total inhibition of both actin reorganization and ACh release induced by LPA. We conclude that the RhoB signaling pathway regulates ACh release via actin cytoskeletal reorganization and that botulinum toxin inhibits neuroexocytosis by targeting RhoB pathway.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inhalational Poisoning by Botulinum Toxin and Inhalation Vaccination with Its Heavy-Chain ComponentInfection and Immunity, 2003
- Rho GTPases in transformation and metastasisPublished by Elsevier ,2002
- Actin' up: RhoB in cancer and apoptosisNature Reviews Cancer, 2001
- Ca2+ influx and cAMP elevation overcame botulinum toxin A but not tetanus toxin inhibition of insulin exocytosisAmerican Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 2001
- A Rho-related GTPase Is Involved in Ca2+-dependent Neurotransmitter ExocytosisJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- Signaling from Rho to the Actin Cytoskeleton Through Protein Kinases ROCK and LIM-kinaseScience, 1999
- Persistence of botulinum neurotoxin action in cultured spinal cord cells1,2FEBS Letters, 1999
- RhoB Is Stabilized by Transforming Growth Factor β and Antagonizes Transcriptional ActivationJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1998
- Involvement of Rho and Rac small G proteins and Rho GDI in Ca2+‐dependent exocytosis from PC12 cellsGenes to Cells, 1996
- Botulinum neurotoxin A selectively cleaves the synaptic protein SNAP-25Nature, 1993