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Dive into the research topics where Zhen Zhang is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhen Zhang.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011

Release mode of large and small dense-core vesicles specified by different synaptotagmin isoforms in PC12 cells

Zhen Zhang; Yao Wu; Zhao Wang; F. Mark Dunning; Jonathan Rehfuss; Deepshika Ramanan; Edwin R. Chapman; Meyer B. Jackson

Different synaptotagmin isoforms (syt I, VII, and IX) sort to populations of dense-core vesicles with different sizes. These isoforms differ in their sensitivities to divalent cations and trigger different modes of exocytosis. Exocytosis triggered by these isoforms also differs in its sensitivity to inhibition by another isoform, syt IV.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Membrane Bending Energy and Fusion Pore Kinetics in Ca2+-Triggered Exocytosis

Zhen Zhang; Meyer B. Jackson

A fusion pore composed of lipid is an obligatory kinetic intermediate of membrane fusion, and its formation requires energy to bend membranes into highly curved shapes. The energetics of such deformations in viral fusion is well established, but the role of membrane bending in Ca(2+)-triggered exocytosis remains largely untested. Amperometry recording showed that during exocytosis in chromaffin and PC12 cells, fusion pores formed by smaller vesicles dilated more rapidly than fusion pores formed by larger vesicles. The logarithm of 1/(fusion pore lifetime) varied linearly with vesicle curvature. The vesicle size dependence of fusion pore lifetime quantitatively accounted for the nonexponential fusion pore lifetime distribution. Experimentally manipulating vesicle size failed to alter the size dependence of fusion pore lifetime. Manipulations of membrane spontaneous curvature altered this dependence, and applying the curvature perturbants to the opposite side of the membrane reversed their effects. These effects of curvature perturbants were opposite to those seen in viral fusion. These results indicate that during Ca(2+)-triggered exocytosis membrane bending opposes fusion pore dilation rather than fusion pore formation. Ca(2+)-triggered exocytosis begins with a proteinaceous fusion pore with less stressed membrane, and becomes lipidic as it dilates, bending membrane into a highly curved shape.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2009

Phosphatidylserine Regulation of Ca2+-triggered Exocytosis and Fusion Pores in PC12 Cells

Zhen Zhang; Enfu Hui; Edwin R. Chapman; Meyer B. Jackson

The synaptic vesicle protein synaptotagmin I (Syt I) binds phosphatidylserine (PS) in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. This interaction is thought to play a role in exocytosis, but its precise functions remain unclear. To determine potential roles for Syt I-PS binding, we varied the PS content in PC12 cells and liposomes and studied the effects on the kinetics of exocytosis and Syt I binding in parallel. Raising PS produced a steeply nonlinear, saturating increase in Ca(2+)-triggered fusion, and a graded slowing of the rate of fusion pore dilation. Ca(2+)-Syt I bound liposomes more tightly as PS content was raised, with a steep increase in binding at low PS, and a further gradual increase at higher PS. These two phases in the PS dependence of Ca(2+)-dependent Syt I binding to lipid may correspond to the two distinct and opposing kinetic effects of PS on exocytosis. PS influences exocytosis in two ways, enhancing an early step leading to fusion pore opening, and slowing a later step when fusion pores dilate. The possible relevance of these results to Ca(2+)-triggered Syt I binding is discussed along with other possible roles of PS.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

The SNARE Proteins SNAP25 and Synaptobrevin Are Involved in Endocytosis at Hippocampal Synapses

Zhen Zhang; Dongsheng Wang; Tao Sun; Jianhua Xu; Hsueh Cheng Chiang; Wonchul Shin; Ling Gang Wu

SNAP25, an essential component of the soluble NSF (N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor) attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complex that mediates exocytosis, is not considered to play a role in endocytosis, which couples to exocytosis by retrieving a similar amount of exocytosed vesicles. By knocking down SNAP25 and imaging slow endocytosis at a conventional synapse, the rat cultured hippocampal synapse, we found that SNAP25 is involved in slow, clathrin-dependent endocytosis. With similar techniques, we found that not only SNAP25, but also synaptobrevin is involved in slow endocytosis. These results provide the first evidence showing the dual role of SNAP25 and synaptobrevin in both exocytosis and slow endocytosis at conventional synapses. Such a dual role may contribute to mediate the coupling between exocytosis and clathrin-dependent endocytosis at conventional synapses, a mechanism critical for the maintenance of synaptic transmission and the normal structure of nerve terminals.


Cell Reports | 2014

Calcineurin Is Universally Involved in Vesicle Endocytosis at Neuronal and Nonneuronal Secretory Cells

Xin-Sheng Wu; Zhen Zhang; Wei-Dong Zhao; Dongsheng Wang; Fujun Luo; Ling-Gang Wu

Calcium influx triggers and accelerates endocytosis in nerve terminals and nonneuronal secretory cells. Whether calcium/calmodulin-activated calcineurin, which dephosphorylates endocytic proteins, mediates this process is highly controversial for different cell types, developmental stages, and endocytic forms. Using three preparations that previously produced discrepant results (i.e., large calyx-type synapses, conventional cerebellar synapses, and neuroendocrine chromaffin cells containing large dense-core vesicles), we found that calcineurin gene knockout consistently slowed down endocytosis, regardless of cell type, developmental stage, or endocytic form (rapid or slow). In contrast, calcineurin and calmodulin blockers slowed down endocytosis at a relatively small calcium influx, but did not inhibit endocytosis at a large calcium influx, resulting in false-negative results. These results suggest that calcineurin is universally involved in endocytosis. They may also help explain the discrepancies among previous pharmacological studies. We therefore suggest that calcineurin should be included as a key player in mediating calcium-triggered and -accelerated vesicle endocytosis.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010

Regulation of Exocytosis and Fusion Pores by Synaptotagmin-Effector Interactions

Zhen Zhang; Enfu Hui; Edwin R. Chapman; Meyer B. Jackson

Synaptotagmin isoforms and mutants altered fusion event frequency and fusion pore transitions. These effects showed a strong correlation with PS binding, but not with SNARE binding. Synaptotagmin-PS interaction thus function in two distinct kinetic steps in Ca2+ triggered exocytosis, and stabilize open fusion pores.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Synaptotagmin IV Modulation of Vesicle Size and Fusion Pores in PC12 Cells

Zhenjie Zhang; Zhen Zhang; Meyer B. Jackson

Many synaptotagmins are Ca(2+)-binding membrane proteins with functions in Ca(2+)-triggered exocytosis. Synaptotagmin IV (syt IV) has no Ca(2+) binding activity, but nevertheless modulates exocytosis. Here, cell-attached capacitance recording was used to study single vesicle fusion and fission in control and syt IV overexpressing PC12 cells. Unitary capacitance steps varied widely in size, indicating that both microvesicles (MVs) and dense-core vesicles (DCVs) undergo fusion. Syt IV overexpression reduced the size of DCVs and endocytotic vesicles but not MVs. Syt IV also reduced the basal rate of Ca(2+)-induced fusion. During kiss-and-run, syt IV increased the conductance and duration of DCV fusion pores but not MV fusion pores. During full-fusion of DCVs syt IV increased the fusion pore conductance but not the duration. Syt IV overexpression increased the duration but not the conductance of fission pores during endocytosis. The effects of syt IV on fusion pores in PC12 cells resembled the effects on fusion pores in peptidergic nerve terminals. However, differences between these and results obtained with amperometry may indicate that amperometry and capacitance detect the fusion of different populations of vesicles. The effects of syt IV on fusion pores are discussed in terms of structural models and kinetic mechanisms.


Biochemistry | 2011

Syntaxin Requirement for Ca2+-Triggered Exocytosis in Neurons and Endocrine Cells Demonstrated with an Engineered Neurotoxin

Dongsheng Wang; Zhen Zhang; Min Dong; Shihu Sun; Edwin R. Chapman; Meyer B. Jackson

Botulinum neurotoxins cleave synaptic SNAREs and block exocytosis, demonstrating that these proteins function in neurosecretion. However, the function of the SNARE syntaxin remains less clear because no neurotoxin cleaves it selectively. Starting with a botulinum neurotoxin that cleaves both syntaxin and SNAP-25, we engineered a version that retains activity against syntaxin but spares SNAP-25. These mutants block synaptic release in neurons and norepinephrine release in neuroendocrine cells, thus establishing an essential role for syntaxin in Ca2+-triggered exocytosis. These mutants can generate syntaxin-free cells as a useful experimental system for research and may lead to pharmaceuticals that target syntaxin selectively.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2008

Temperature Dependence of Fusion Kinetics and Fusion Pores in Ca2+-triggered Exocytosis from PC12 Cells

Zhen Zhang; Meyer B. Jackson

The temperature dependence of Ca2+-triggered exocytosis was studied using carbon fiber amperometry to record the release of norepinephrine from PC12 cells. Single-vesicle fusion events were examined at temperatures varying from 12 to 28°C, and with release elicited by depolarization. Measurements were made of the initial and maximum frequencies of exocytotic events, of fusion pore lifetime, flux through the open fusion pore, kiss-and-run versus full-fusion probability, and parameters associated with the shapes of amperometric spikes. The fusion pore open-state flux, and all parameters associated with spike shape, including area, rise time, and decay time, had weak temperature dependences and activation energies in the range expected for bulk diffusion in an aqueous solution. Kiss-and-run events also varied with temperature, with lower temperatures increasing the relative probability of kiss-and-run events by ∼50%. By contrast, kinetic parameters relating to the frequency of exocytotic events and fusion pore transitions depended much more strongly on temperature, suggesting that these processes entail structural rearrangements of proteins or lipids or both. The weak temperature dependence of spike shape suggests that after the fusion pore has started to expand, structural transitions of membrane components are no longer kinetically limiting. This indicates that the content of a vesicle is expelled completely after fusion pore expansion.


Neuron | 2016

Actin Is Crucial for All Kinetically Distinguishable Forms of Endocytosis at Synapses

Xin Sheng Wu; Sung Hoon Lee; Jiansong Sheng; Zhen Zhang; Wei Dong Zhao; Dongsheng Wang; Yinghui Jin; Patrick Charnay; James M. Ervasti; Ling Gang Wu

Mechanical force is needed to mediate endocytosis. Whether actin, the most abundant force-generating molecule, is essential for endocytosis is highly controversial in mammalian cells, particularly synapses, likely due to the use of actin blockers, the efficiency and specificity of which are often unclear in the studied cell. Here we addressed this issue using a knockout approach combined with measurements of membrane capacitance and fission pore conductance, imaging of vesicular protein endocytosis, and electron microscopy. We found that two actin isoforms, β- and γ-actin, are crucial for slow, rapid, bulk, and overshoot endocytosis at large calyx-type synapses, and for slow endocytosis and bulk endocytosis at small hippocampal synapses. Polymerized actin provides mechanical force to form endocytic pits. Actin also facilitates replenishment of the readily releasable vesicle pool, likely via endocytic clearance of active zones. We conclude that polymerized actin provides mechanical force essential for all kinetically distinguishable forms of endocytosis at synapses.

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Meyer B. Jackson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Dongsheng Wang

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Edwin R. Chapman

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Ling Gang Wu

National Institutes of Health

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Fujun Luo

National Institutes of Health

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Jianhua Xu

National Institutes of Health

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Wonchul Shin

National Institutes of Health

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Xin Sheng Wu

National Institutes of Health

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Enfu Hui

University of California

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Hsueh Cheng Chiang

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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