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Membrane Biology
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- Membrane BiologyOpen Access
Syntaxin 3, but not syntaxin 4, is required for mast cell–regulated exocytosis, where it plays a primary role mediating compound exocytosis
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 9p3012–3023Published online: December 18, 2018- Elizabeth Sanchez
- Erika A. Gonzalez
- David S. Moreno
- Rodolfo A. Cardenas
- Marco A. Ramos
- Alfredo J. Davalos
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 17Mast cells (MCs) participate in allergy, inflammation, and defense against pathogens. They release multiple immune mediators via exocytosis, a process that requires SNARE proteins, including syntaxins (Stxs). The identity of the Stxs involved in MC exocytosis remains controversial. Here, we studied the roles of Stx3 and -4 in fully developed MCs from conditional knockout mice by electrophysiology and EM, and found that Stx3, and not Stx4, is crucial for MC exocytosis. The main defect seen in Stx3-deficient MCs was their inability to engage multigranular compound exocytosis, while leaving most single-vesicle fusion events intact.