Scientific Reports (Mar 2017)

SUMOylation and calcium control syntaxin-1A and secretagogin sequestration by tomosyn to regulate insulin exocytosis in human ß cells

  • Mourad Ferdaoussi,
  • Jianyang Fu,
  • Xiaoqing Dai,
  • Jocelyn E. Manning Fox,
  • Kunimasa Suzuki,
  • Nancy Smith,
  • Gregory Plummer,
  • Patrick E. MacDonald

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-00344-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Insulin secretion from pancreatic ß cells is a multistep process that requires the coordination of exocytotic proteins that integrate diverse signals. These include signals derived from metabolic control of post-translational SUMOylation and depolarization-induced rises in intracellular Ca2+. Here we show that tomosyn, which suppresses insulin exocytosis by binding syntaxin1A, does so in a manner which requires its SUMOylation. Glucose-dependent de-SUMOylation of tomosyn1 at K298 releases syntaxin1A and controls the amplification of exocytosis in concert with a recently-identified tomosyn1-interacting partner; the Ca2+-binding protein secretagogin, which dissociates from tomosyn1 in response to Ca2+-raising stimuli and is required for insulin granule trafficking and exocytosis downstream of Ca2+ influx. Together our results suggest that tomosyn acts as a key signaling hub in insulin secretion by integrating signals mediated by metabolism-dependent de-SUMOylation and electrically-induced entry of Ca2+ to regulate the availability of exocytotic proteins required for the amplification of insulin secretion.