N. Brose et al., MAMMALIAN HOMOLOGS OF CAENORHABDITIS-ELEGANS UNC-13 GENE DEFINE NOVELFAMILY OF C-2-DOMAIN PROTEINS, The Journal of biological chemistry, 270(42), 1995, pp. 25273-25280
The unc-13 gene in Caenorhabditis elegans is essential for normal pres
ynaptic function and encodes a large protein with C-1- and C-2-domains
. In protein kinase C and synaptotagmin, C-1- and/or C-2-domains are r
egulatory domains for Ca2+, phospholipids, and diacylglycerol, suggest
ing a role for unc-13 in regulating neurotransmitter release. To deter
mine if a similar protein is a component of the presynaptic machinery
for neurotransmitter release in vertebrates, we studied unc-13 homolog
ues in rat. Molecular cloning revealed that three homologues of unc-13
called Munc13-1, -13-2, and -13-3 are expressed in rat brain. Munc13s
are large, brain-specific proteins with divergent N termini but conse
rved C termini containing C-1- and C-2-domains. Specific antibodies de
monstrated that Munc13-1 is a peripheral membrane protein that is enri
ched in synaptosomes and localized to plasma membranes but absent from
synaptic vesicles. Our data suggest that the function of unc-13 in C.
elegans is conserved in mammals and that Munc13s act as plasma membra
ne proteins in nerve terminals. The presence of C-1- and C-2-domains i
n these proteins and the phenotype of the C. elegans mutants raise the
possibility that Munc13s may have an essential signaling role during
neurotransmitter release.