Michelle A. Falkowski
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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Featured researches published by Michelle A. Falkowski.
Cell Calcium | 2014
Scott W. Messenger; Michelle A. Falkowski; Guy E. Groblewski
Protein secretion from acinar cells of the pancreas and parotid glands is controlled by G-protein coupled receptor activation and generation of the cellular messengers Ca(2+), diacylglycerol and cAMP. Secretory granule (SG) exocytosis shares some common characteristics with nerve, neuroendocrine and endocrine cells which are regulated mainly by elevated cell Ca(2+). However, in addition to diverse signaling pathways, acinar cells have large ∼1 μm diameter SGs (∼30 fold larger diameter than synaptic vesicles), respond to stimulation at slower rates (seconds versus milliseconds), demonstrate significant constitutive secretion, and in isolated acini, undergo sequential compound SG-SG exocytosis at the apical membrane. Exocytosis proceeds as an initial rapid phase that peaks and declines over 3 min followed by a prolonged phase that decays to near basal levels over 20-30 min. Studies indicate the early phase is triggered by Ca(2+) and involves the SG proteins VAMP2 (vesicle associated membrane protein2), Ca(2+)-sensing protein synatotagmin 1 (syt1) and the accessory protein complexin 2. The molecular details for regulation of VAMP8-mediated SG exocytosis and the prolonged phase of secretion are still emerging. Here we review the known regulatory molecules that impact the sequential exocytic process of SG tethering, docking, priming and fusion in acinar cells.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Michelle A. Falkowski; Diana D. H. Thomas; Guy E. Groblewski
Complexins are soluble proteins that regulate the activity of soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complexes necessary for vesicle fusion. Neuronal specific complexin 1 has inhibitory and stimulatory effects on exocytosis by clamping trans-SNARE complexes in a prefusion state and promoting conformational changes to facilitate membrane fusion following cell stimulation. Complexins are unable to bind to monomeric SNARE proteins but bind with high affinity to ternary SNARE complexes and with lower affinity to target SNARE complexes. Far less is understood about complexin function outside the nervous system. Pancreatic acini express the complexin 2 isoform by RT-PCR and immunoblotting. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed complexin 2 localized along the apical plasma membrane consistent with a role in secretion. Accordingly, complexin 2 was found to interact with vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP) 2, syntaxins 3 and 4, but not with VAMP 8 or syntaxin 2. Introduction of recombinant complexin 2 into permeabilized acini inhibited Ca2+-stimulated secretion in a concentration-dependent manner with a maximal inhibition of nearly 50%. Mutations of the central α-helical domain reduced complexin 2 SNARE binding and concurrently abolished its inhibitory activity. Surprisingly, mutation of arginine 59 to histidine within the central α-helical domain did not alter SNARE binding and moreover, augmented Ca2+-stimulated secretion by 130% of control. Consistent with biochemical studies, complexin 2 colocalized with VAMP 2 along the apical plasma membrane following cholecystokinin-8 stimulation. These data demonstrate a functional role for complexin 2 outside the nervous system and indicate that it participates in the Ca2+-sensitive regulatory pathway for zymogen granule exocytosis.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2013
Scott W. Messenger; Diana D. H. Thomas; Michelle A. Falkowski; Jennifer A. Byrne; Fred S. Gorelick; Guy E. Groblewski
Zymogen granule (ZG) formation in acinar cells involves zymogen cargo sorting from trans-Golgi into immature secretory granules (ISGs). ISG maturation progresses by removal of lysosomal membrane and select content proteins, which enter endosomal intermediates prior to their apical exocytosis. Constitutive and stimulated secretion through this mechanism is termed the constitutive-like and minor-regulated pathways, respectively. However, the molecular components that control membrane trafficking within these endosomal compartments are largely unknown. We show that tumor protein D52 is highly expressed in endosomal compartments following pancreatic acinar cell stimulation and regulates apical exocytosis of an apically directed endolysosomal compartment. Secretion from the endolysosomal compartment was detected by cell-surface antigen labeling of lysosome-associated membrane protein LAMP1, which is absent from ZGs, and had incomplete overlap with surface labeling of synaptotagmin 1, a marker of ZG exocytosis. Although culturing (16-18 h) of isolated acinar cells is accompanied by a loss of secretory responsiveness, the levels of SNARE proteins necessary for ZG exocytosis were preserved. However, levels of endolysosomal proteins D52, EEA1, Rab5, and LAMP1 markedly decreased with culture. When D52 levels were restored by adenoviral delivery, the levels of these regulatory proteins and secretion of both LAMP1 (endolysosomal) and amylase was strongly enhanced. These secretory effects were absent in alanine and aspartate substitutions of serine 136, the major D52 phosphorylation site, and were inhibited by brefeldin A, which does not directly affect the ZG compartment. Our results indicate that D52 directly regulates apical endolysosomal secretion and are consistent with previous studies, suggesting that this pathway indirectly regulates ZG secretion of digestive enzymes.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2011
Michelle A. Falkowski; Diana D. H. Thomas; Scott W. Messenger; Thomas F. J. Martin; Guy E. Groblewski
Secretagogue-induced changes in intracellular Ca(2+) play a pivotal role in secretion in pancreatic acini yet the molecules that respond to Ca(2+) are uncertain. Zymogen granule (ZG) exocytosis is regulated by soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complexes. In nerve and endocrine cells, Ca(2+)-stimulated exocytosis is regulated by the SNARE-associated family of proteins termed synaptotagmins. This study examined a potential role for synaptotagmins in acinar secretion. RT-PCR revealed that synaptotagmin isoforms 1, 3, 6, and 7 are present in isolated acini. Immunoblotting and immunofluorescence using three different antibodies demonstrated synaptotagmin 1 immunoreactivity in apical cytoplasm and ZG fractions of acini, where it colocalized with vesicle-associated membrane protein 2. Synaptotagmin 3 immunoreactivity was detected in membrane fractions and colocalized with an endolysosomal marker. A potential functional role for synaptotagmin 1 in secretion was indicated by results that introduction of synaptotagmin 1 C2AB domain into permeabilized acini inhibited Ca(2+)-dependent exocytosis by 35%. In contrast, constructs of synaptotagmin 3 had no effect. Confirmation of these findings was achieved by incubating intact acini with an antibody specific to the intraluminal domain of synaptotagmin 1, which is externalized following exocytosis. Externalized synaptotagmin 1 was detected exclusively along the apical membrane. Treatment with CCK-8 (100 pM, 5 min) enhanced immunoreactivity by fourfold, demonstrating that synaptotagmin is inserted into the apical membrane during ZG fusion. Collectively, these data indicate that acini express synaptotagmin 1 and support that it plays a functional role in secretion whereas synaptotagmin 3 has an alternative role in endolysosomal membrane trafficking.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Scott W. Messenger; Michelle A. Falkowski; Diana D. H. Thomas; Elaina K. Jones; Wanjin Hong; Herbert Y. Gaisano; Nicholas M. Boulis; Guy E. Groblewski
Background: Acinar cells contain two vesicle-associated membrane proteins (VAMP) 2 and 8 for secretion. Results: WT and VAMP8 knock-out acini expressing various regulatory protein constructs demonstrate VAMP2 regulates early and VAMP8 late phases of secretion. Conclusion: VAMP8- but not VAMP2-mediated secretion is dependent on anterograde endosomal trafficking. Significance: Results provide mechanistic insight into how different zymogen granule VAMPs shape secretion. Acinar cell zymogen granules (ZG) express 2 isoforms of the vesicle-associated membrane protein family (VAMP2 and -8) thought to regulate exocytosis. Expression of tetanus toxin to cleave VAMP2 in VAMP8 knock-out (−/−) acini confirmed that VAMP2 and -8 are the primary VAMPs for regulated exocytosis, each contributing ∼50% of the response. Analysis of VAMP8−/− acini indicated that although stimulated secretion was significantly reduced, a compensatory increase in constitutive secretion maintained total secretion equivalent to wild type (WT). Using a perifusion system to follow secretion over time revealed VAMP2 mediates an early rapid phase peaking and falling within 2–3 min, whereas VAMP8 controls a second prolonged phase that peaks at 4 min and slowly declines over 20 min to support the protracted secretory response. VAMP8−/− acini show increased expression of the endosomal proteins Ti-VAMP7 (2-fold) and Rab11a (4-fold) and their redistribution from endosomes to ZGs. Expression of GDP-trapped Rab11a-S25N inhibited secretion exclusively from the VAMP8 but not the VAMP2 pathway. VAMP8−/− acini also showed a >90% decrease in the early endosomal proteins Rab5/D52/EEA1, which control anterograde trafficking in the constitutive-like secretory pathway. In WT acini, short term (14–16 h) culture also results in a >90% decrease in Rab5/D52/EEA1 and a complete loss of the VAMP8 pathway, whereas VAMP2-secretion remains intact. Remarkably, rescue of Rab5/D52/EEA1 expression restored the VAMP8 pathway. Expressed D52 shows extensive colocalization with Rab11a and VAMP8 and partially copurifies with ZG fractions. These results indicate that robust trafficking within the constitutive-like secretory pathway is required for VAMP8- but not VAMP2-mediated ZG exocytosis.
Cellular and molecular gastroenterology and hepatology | 2015
Scott W. Messenger; Diana D. H. Thomas; Michelle Cooley; Elaina K. Jones; Michelle A. Falkowski; Benjamin K. August; Luis A. Fernandez; Fred S. Gorelick; Guy E. Groblewski
Background & Aims Pancreatic acinar cells have an expanded apical endosomal system, the physiologic and pathophysiologic significance of which is still emerging. Phosphatidylinositol-3,5-bisphosphate [PI(3,5)P2] is an essential phospholipid generated by phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate 5-kinase (PIKfyve), which phosphorylates phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate (PI3P). PI(3,5)P2 is necessary for maturation of early endosomes (EE) to late endosomes (LE). Inhibition of EE to LE trafficking enhances anterograde endosomal trafficking and secretion at the plasma membrane by default through a recycling endosome (RE) intermediate. We assessed the effects of modulating PIKfyve activity on apical trafficking and pancreatitis responses in pancreatic acinar cells. Methods Inhibition of EE to LE trafficking was achieved using pharmacologic inhibitors of PIKfyve, expression of dominant negative PIKfyve K1877E, or constitutively active Rab5-GTP Q79L. Anterograde endosomal trafficking was manipulated by expression of constitutively active and dominant negative Rab11a mutants. The effects of these agents on secretion, endolysosomal exocytosis of lysosome associated membrane protein (LAMP1), and trypsinogen activation in response to supramaximal cholecystokinin (CCK-8), bile acids, and cigarette toxin was determined. Results PIKfyve inhibition increased basal and stimulated secretion. Adenoviral overexpression of PIKfyve decreased secretion leading to cellular death. Expression of Rab5-GTP Q79L or Rab11a-GTP Q70L enhanced secretion. Conversely, dominant-negative Rab11a-GDP S25N reduced secretion. High-dose CCK inhibited endolysosomal exocytosis that was reversed by PIKfyve inhibition. PIKfyve inhibition blocked intracellular trypsin accumulation and cellular damage responses to supramaximal CCK-8, tobacco toxin, and bile salts in both rodent and human acini. Conclusions These data demonstrate that EE-LE trafficking acutely controls acinar secretion and the intracellular activation of zymogens, leading to the pathogenicity of acute pancreatitis.
Gastroenterology | 2010
Michelle A. Falkowski; Diana D. H. Thomas; Guy E. Groblewski
Alcohol abuse is a leading cause of pancreatitis, accounting for 30% of acute and up to 90% of chronic cases, yet the mechanisms leading to alcohol-induced injury remain elusive. An early and critical feature of this disease is the aberrant signaling of Ca2+ within the pancreatic acinar cell. An important conductor of this Ca2+ release is the basolaterally localized, intracellular Ca2+ channel the ryanodine receptor (RYR). In this study, we examined the role of the RYR in mediating Ca2+ signals during alcohol exposure. We hypothesized that alcohol triggers the release of Ca2+ from pathologically leaky, hyper-phosphorylated RYRs. Acinar cells were freshly isolated from rat, loaded with the Ca2+ dye fluo-4, and imaged by time lapse confocal microscopy. Spatial and temporal changes in Ca2+ release were examined after perfusion with the Ca2+-activating agonist carbachol (1 uM) with or without an ethanol concentration clinically achievable after heavy intoxication (100 mM). Ethanol accelerated the speed of the apical to basolateral Ca2+ wave from 9 to 18 um/sec (P<0.0005; n=18-22 cells/group). Ethanol also caused a similar doubling in intra-cellular cAMP levels from 1.5 to 3 fmoles. Acceleration of the acinar cell Ca2+ wave by alcohol was abrogated by the PKA inhibitor PKI (1 uM; P<0.05; n=10-16 cells/group). Using an epitope-specific phospho-antibody that recognizes the PKA site on the RYR, we found that ethanol increased RYR phosphorylation by nearly five-fold (P<0.05). Finally, the alcohol-induced acceleration of Ca2+ wave speed was completely reduced by the RYR inhibitor dantrolene (100 uM; P<0.05; n=10-16 cells/group). In summary, our results have for the first time implicated a pathological role for RYR-Ca2+ release in the predisposition to alcohol-induced pancreatitis via cAMP/PKA hyper-phosphorylation of the RYR.
American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2009
Ning Weng; M. D. Baumler; Diana D. H. Thomas; Michelle A. Falkowski; Leigh Anne Swayne; Janice E. A. Braun; Guy E. Groblewski
Archive | 2013
Scott W. Messenger; Michelle A. Falkowski; Jennifer A. Byrne; S Fred; Guy E. Groblewski; G. E. Groblewski
Gastroenterology | 2011
Scott W. Messenger; Diana D. H. Thomas; Michelle A. Falkowski; Guy E. Groblewski