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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The pancreatic acinus is the functional unit of the exocrine pancreas whose role is to secrete zymogens into the gut lumen for food digestion via apical exocytosis. We previously reported that supramaximal CCK induced apical blockade and redirected exocytosis to ectopic sites on the basolateral plasma membrane (BPM) of this polarized cell, leading to
pancreatitis
. Basolateral exocytosis was mediated by protein kinase C phosphorylation of BPM Munc18c, causing its displacement into the cytosol and activation of BPM-bound
Syntaxin-4
to form a SNARE complex. To mimic the conditions of alcoholic pancreatitis, we now examined whether 20 mm alcohol followed by submaximal CCK might mimic supramaximal CCK in inducing these pathologic exocytotic events. We show that a non-secretory but clinically relevant alcohol concentration (20 mm) inhibited submaximal CCK (50 pM)-stimulated amylase secretion by blocking apical exocytosis and redirecting exocytosis to less efficient BPM, indeed mimicking supramaximal CCK (10 nM) stimulation. We further demonstrate that basolateral exocytosis caused by both stimulation protocols is mediated by PKC alpha-induced phosphorylation of Munc18c: 1) PKC alpha is activated, which binds and induces phosphorylation of PM-Munc18c at a Thr site, and these events can be inhibited by PKC alpha blockade; 2) PKC alpha inhibition blocks Munc18c displacement from the BPM; 3) PKC alpha inhibition prevents basolateral exocytosis but does not rescue apical exocytosis. We conclude that 20 mm alcohol/submaximal CCK as well supramaximal CCK stimulation can trigger pathologic basolateral exocytosis in pancreatic acinar cells via PKC alpha-mediated activation of Munc18c, which enables
Syntaxin-4
to become receptive in forming a SNARE complex in the BPM; and we further postulate this to be an underlying mechanism contributing to alcoholic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Alcohol/cholecystokinin-evoked pancreatic acinar basolateral exocytosis is mediated by protein kinase C alpha phosphorylation of Munc18c. 1732 28
In rodents and humans, alcohol exposure has been shown to predispose the pancreas to cholinergic or viral induction of
pancreatitis
. We previously developed a rodent model in which exposure to an ethanol (EtOH) diet, followed by carbachol (Cch) stimulation, redirects exocytosis from the apical to the basolateral plasma membrane of acinar cells, resulting in ectopic zymogen enzyme activation and
pancreatitis
. This redirection of exocytosis involves a soluble NSF attachment receptor (SNARE) complex consisting of
syntaxin-4
and synapse-associated protein of 23 kDa (SNAP-23). Here, we investigated the role of the zymogen granule (ZG) SNARE vesicle-associated membrane protein 8 (VAMP8) in mediating basolateral exocytosis. In WT mice, in vitro EtOH exposure or EtOH diet reduced Cch-stimulated amylase release by redirecting apical exocytosis to the basolateral membrane, leading to alcoholic pancreatitis. Further reduction of zymogen secretion, caused by blockade of both apical and basolateral exocytosis and resulting in a more mild induction of alcoholic pancreatitis, was observed in Vamp8(-/-) mice in response to these treatments. In addition, although ZGs accumulated in Vamp8(-/-) acinar cells, ZG-ZG fusions were reduced compared with those in WT acinar cells, as visualized by electron microscopy. This reduction in ZG fusion may account for reduced efficiency of apical exocytosis in Vamp8(-/-) acini. These findings indicate that VAMP8 is the ZG-SNARE that mediates basolateral exocytosis in alcoholic pancreatitis and that VAMP8 is critical for ZG-ZG homotypic fusion.
...
PMID:VAMP8 is the v-SNARE that mediates basolateral exocytosis in a mouse model of alcoholic pancreatitis. 1853 71
Epithelial pancreatic acinar cells perform crucial functions in food digestion, and acinar cell homeostasis required for secretion of digestive enzymes relies on SNARE-mediated exocytosis. The ubiquitously expressed Sec1/Munc18 protein mammalian uncoordinated-18c (Munc18c) regulates membrane fusion by activating
syntaxin-4
(STX-4) to bind cognate SNARE proteins to form a SNARE complex that mediates exocytosis in many cell types. However, in the acinar cell, Munc18c's functions in exocytosis and homeostasis remain inconclusive. Here, we found that pancreatic acini from Munc18c-depleted mice (Munc18c
+/-
) and human pancreas (lenti-Munc18c-shRNA-treated) exhibit normal apical exocytosis of zymogen granules (ZGs) in response to physiologic stimulation with the intestinal hormone cholecystokinin (CCK-8). However, when stimulated with supraphysiologic CCK-8 levels to mimic
pancreatitis
, Munc18c-depleted (Munc18c
+/-
) mouse acini exhibited a reduction in pathological basolateral exocytosis of ZGs resulting from a decrease in fusogenic STX-4 SNARE complexes. This reduced basolateral exocytosis in part explained the less severe
pancreatitis
observed in Munc18c
+/-
mice after hyperstimulation with the CCK-8 analog caerulein. Likely as a result of this secretory blockade, Munc18c-depleted acini unexpectedly activated a component of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response that contributed to autophagy induction, resulting in downstream accumulation of autophagic vacuoles and autolysosomes. We conclude that Munc18c's role in mediating ectopic basolateral membrane fusion of ZGs contributes to the initiation of CCK-induced pancreatic injury, and that blockade of this secretory process could increase autophagy induction.
...
PMID:Depletion of the membrane-fusion regulator Munc18c attenuates caerulein hyperstimulation-induced pancreatitis. 2928 77