Dynamin 1xA interacts with Endophilin A1 via its spliced long C-terminus for ultrafast endocytosis

Author:

Imoto Yuuta,Xue JingORCID,Luo Lin,Raychaudhuri Sumana,Itoh Kie,Ma YeORCID,Craft George EORCID,Kwan Ann H,Ogunmowo Tyler H,Ho AnnieORCID,Mackay Joel P,Ha Taekjip,Watanabe ShigekiORCID,Robinson Phillip J

Abstract

AbstractDynamin 1 mediates fission of endocytic synaptic vesicles in the brain and has two major splice variants, Dyn1xA and Dyn1xB, which are nearly identical apart from the extended C-terminal region of Dyn1xA. Despite a similar set of binding partners, only Dyn1xA is enriched at endocytic zones and accelerates vesicle fission during ultrafast endocytosis. Here, we report that Dyn1xA achieves this localization by preferentially binding to Endophilin A1 through a newly defined binding site within its long C-terminal tail extension. Endophilin A1 binds this site at higher affinity than the previously reported site, and the affinity is determined by amino acids within the Dyn1xA tail but outside the binding site. This interaction is regulated by the phosphorylation state of two serine residues specific to the Dyn1xA variant. Dyn1xA and Endophilin A1 colocalize in patches near the active zone, and mutations disrupting Endophilin A binding to the long tail cause Dyn1xA mislocalization and stalled endocytic pits on the plasma membrane during ultrafast endocytosis. Together, these data suggest that the specificity for ultrafast endocytosis is defined by the phosphorylation-regulated interaction of Endophilin A1 with the C-terminal extension of Dyn1xA.

Funder

DHAC | National Health and Medical Research Council

Helis foundation award

Brain Research Foundation Scientific Innovation Award

National Science Foundation

NIH

Alfred Sloan fellow

McKnight Foundation

Klingenstein and Simons Foundation

Vallee Foundation

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science London

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

the Children’s Medical Research Institute

Australian Cancer Research Foundation

the Ramaciotti Foundation and the Cancer Institute NSW

Johns Hopkins University

Marine Biological Laboratory

Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative Collaborative Pair Grant

Kazato Research Foundation

American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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