コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 aflets (stalk formation), and formation of a fusion pore.
2 mifusion intermediate and the opening of the fusion pore.
3 g of the SNARE complex to the opening of the fusion pore.
4 fusion step before opening of the productive fusion pore.
5 fusion starts with the formation of a narrow fusion pore.
6 t transition (expansion) of the stalk into a fusion pore.
7 both initiation of fusion and formation of a fusion pore.
8 the plasma membranes, and the formation of a fusion pore.
9 together, thus allowing their TMRs to form a fusion pore.
10 ion of the molecular control of the platelet fusion pore.
11 eleased immediately after the formation of a fusion pore.
12 ell into the collapsed vesicle to expand the fusion pore.
13 content through a transient, nanometer-sized fusion pore.
14 st likely due to the flickering of a dilated fusion pore.
15 catecholamine through a restricted secretory fusion pore.
16 nonlamellar lipidic intermediate states to a fusion pore.
17 ntrolled through regulation of the secretory fusion pore.
18 it becomes leaky and unable to form a clean fusion pore.
19 nd appear to be involved in formation of the fusion pore.
20 d to the presynaptic membrane by a transient fusion pore.
21 in which holes in the membrane evolve into a fusion pore.
22 nsistent with the delayed enlargement of the fusion pore.
23 endent effects on dilation of the exocytotic fusion pore.
24 a stalk, hemifusion and the completion of a fusion pore.
25 and a hemifusion-stalk pathway leading to a fusion pore.
26 aracteristic of hemifusion intermediates and fusion pores.
27 t and transient openings and closings of the fusion pores.
28 ot gather information about the formation of fusion pores.
29 nly associated with large dense core granule fusion pores.
30 als the dynamic formation and dissolution of fusion pores.
31 r the syt-PS interaction in stabilizing open fusion pores.
32 r frequency of fusion events and more stable fusion pores.
33 and duration of DCV fusion pores but not MV fusion pores.
34 that SNARE/lipid complexes form proteolipid fusion pores.
35 and promote the stabilization of exocytotic fusion pores.
36 blockage is due to the stabilization of open fusion pores.
41 y to play a crucial role in formation of the fusion pore, an essential structure required in the fina
42 a shift fragment that shifted to expand the fusion pore and 2) a fall-in fragment that fell into the
43 s occurs because of premature closure of the fusion pore and is modulated by the activity of clathrin
46 , CpxII attenuates fluctuations of the early fusion pore and slows its expansion but is functionally
47 ives rise to an unequal distance between the fusion pore and the electrode as well as fusion pore siz
49 ease transmitter, but instead to close their fusion pores and survive intact for future use (kiss-and
50 sion, Kar5p may help dilation of the initial fusion pore, and Kar2p and Kar8p act after outer NE fusi
51 interplay between diffusion, flux through a fusion pore, and possibly dissociation from a vesicle's
52 consistent descriptions for the shape of the fusion pore, and the deviation between the continuum and
54 er that a vesicle, when activated, opens its fusion pore approximately 3 times out of 4 and that the
55 )(-)), the expansion and closing time of the fusion pore are longer, suggesting chaotropes can extend
58 Regulated exocytosis establishes a narrow fusion pore as initial aqueous connection to the extrace
60 the structure and composition of the initial fusion pore, as well as the question of whether SNAREs m
61 e greater stability of an initial exocytotic fusion pore associated with larger vesicles reflects the
63 d kiss and run exocytosis opens synaptic DCV fusion pores away from active zones that readily conduct
65 at the cAMP-sensor Epac2 (Rap-GEF4) controls fusion pore behavior by acutely recruiting two pore-rest
66 esterol opens pores directly by reducing the fusion-pore bending energy, and indirectly by concentrat
70 mine molecules that are escaping through the fusion pore but favor its interaction with the vesicle m
72 own that second messenger cAMP modulates the fusion pore, but the detailed mechanisms remain elusive.
73 indicate a role for the syb2 TMD in nascent fusion pores, but in a very different structural arrange
75 y, we studied the stability of the transient fusion pore by measuring its dwell time, relation to ves
76 icle docking and fusion and the promotion of fusion pores by negative intrinsic spontaneous curvature
77 one- or neurotransmitter-filled vesicle -the fusion pore- can flicker open and closed repeatedly befo
79 fter exocytosis, SVs are recovered by either fusion pore closure (kiss-and-run) or clathrin-mediated
82 a wider fusion pore as measured by increased fusion pore conductance and a prolonged fusion pore dwel
85 charge of TMD residues near the N terminus; fusion pore conductance was altered by substitutions at
87 mperometric "foot-current" currents, reduced fusion pore conductances, and lower fusion pore expansio
88 ranule exocytosis measurements) in which the fusion pore connecting the granule lumen to the exterior
89 ulforhodamine 101 imaging showed that double fusion pores could simultaneously occur in a single vesi
90 o expand the hemifusion diaphragm and form a fusion pore decreases rapidly as the radius decreases.
91 ipid mixing always preceded the opening of a fusion pore, demonstrating that VSV G-mediated fusion pr
95 er elevated stimulation frequencies inhibits fusion pore dilation and maintains the granule in a kiss
96 at membrane tension is the driving force for fusion pore dilation and that Cdc42 is a key regulator o
97 , while showing no change in the kinetics of fusion pore dilation or morphological vesicle docking.
98 riggered exocytosis membrane bending opposes fusion pore dilation rather than fusion pore formation.
99 mulation (action potentials at 15 Hz) evokes fusion pore dilation, full granule collapse, and additio
105 Conductance through single, voltage-clamped fusion pores directly reported sub-millisecond pore dyna
106 cies, slower release kinetics, and prolonged fusion pore duration that were correlated with reduced p
107 Together, they probe the continuum of the fusion-pore duration, from milliseconds to many seconds
109 tion, expansion, and closing of the membrane fusion pore during exocytosis was found to be strongly d
112 ionship between the formation of hundreds of fusion pores during the acrosome reaction in spermatozoa
114 retation of amperometric current in terms of fusion pore dynamics and provides a, to our knowledge, n
115 v-SNARE TMD variants differentially regulate fusion pore dynamics in mouse chromaffin cells, indicati
118 flection fluorescence microscopy to quantify fusion-pore dynamics in vitro and to separate the roles
119 assays show a strain-independent failure of fusion pore enlargement among H2 (A/Japan/305/57), H3 (A
126 e hydrolase (GTPase) activity in controlling fusion pore expansion and postfusion granule membrane to
127 ion demonstrate a novel mechanism underlying fusion pore expansion and provide a new explanation for
130 MD restores normal secretion but accelerates fusion pore expansion beyond the rate found for the wild
131 a(2+)-dependent Syt-effector interactions in fusion pore expansion by expressing Syt-1 mutants select
132 ctivity of dynamin regulates the rapidity of fusion pore expansion from tens of milliseconds to secon
133 min I in the regulation of activity-mediated fusion pore expansion in mouse adrenal chromaffin cells.
137 that pharmacological interventions promoting fusion pore expansion may be effective in diabetes thera
140 the view that membrane bending occurs during fusion pore expansion rather than during fusion pore for
141 y early F-triggering but also late extensive fusion pore expansion steps in the membrane fusion casca
142 tivity, experienced under stress, results in fusion pore expansion to evoke maximal catecholamine rel
153 Ca(2+)-affinity of release, and accelerates fusion-pore expansion during individual vesicle fusion e
156 peared ~6 s after initial opening, as if the fusion pore fluctuated in size, flickered, and resealed.
160 us conclude that the content release, i.e., fusion pore formation after the merger of the two lipid
167 current models, the experiments suggest that fusion pore formation begins with molecular rearrangemen
172 The results suggest a mechanism whereby fusion pore formation is induced by movement of the char
174 s and the substantial reduction in energy of fusion pore formation provided by this spread indicate t
175 sts that HA acylation, while not critical to fusion pore formation, contributes to pore expansion in
176 viral membranes mix (lipid mixing) prior to fusion pore formation, enlargement, and completion of fu
186 fluorescence was recovered, presumably after fusion-pore formation and exposure of the core to the ph
187 endent fusion of isolated VLPs to liposomes: fusion pores formed and expanded, as demonstrated by the
189 ing exocytosis in chromaffin and PC12 cells, fusion pores formed by smaller vesicles dilated more rap
190 med to probe the function of the syb2 TMD in fusion pores formed during catecholamine exocytosis in m
191 SB-JMR-TMD enhanced the rates of stalk and fusion pore (FP) formation in a sharply sigmoidal fashio
192 cell-attached patches and dense-core vesicle fusion pores had conductances that were half as large as
194 curvature energies of stalks and catenoidal fusion pores have almost the same dependence on monolaye
195 n of a stalk, and triggered expansion of the fusion pore, here we introduce a synthetic fusogen that
200 orrespond to the initial opening of a narrow fusion pore, in adrenal chromaffin cells of wild-type an
201 vents dilation and reveals properties of the fusion pore induced by SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-s
203 ion along pathways involving Pn3m phase-like fusion pore intermediates rather than pathways involving
206 cent prediction of continuum models that the fusion pore is a metastable structure and that its optim
209 e is no mechanistic model explaining how the fusion pore is opened by conformational changes in the S
212 mental observation of flickering and closing fusion pores (kiss-and-run) is very well explained by th
213 ithout any accessory proteins can expand the fusion pore large enough to transmit ~11 kDa cargoes.
214 ver, repetitive stimuli induce a more stable fusion pore, leading to an increased amount of neurotran
215 l fusion was most efficient and the extended fusion pore lifetime (0.7 s) enabled notable detection o
216 on Ca(2+)-triggered exocytosis revealed that fusion pore lifetime (tau) varies with vesicle content (
221 lower fusion pore expansion rates and longer fusion pore lifetimes were observed after inhibition of
222 Once formed, the initially stable and narrow fusion pore may reversibly widen (transient exocytosis)
223 sion pore properties, suggesting a model for fusion pore mechanics that couple C terminal zipping of
225 ovide further support for the existence of a fusion pore mediated mode of exocytosis, and demonstrate
226 l features (e.g., dimension and shape of the fusion pore near the pore center) are consistent among i
228 IP2/BAR assembly that regulates the exocytic fusion pore of dense-core vesicles in cultured endocrine
236 +)-dependent SNARE binding exhibited reduced fusion pore opening probabilities and reduced fusion por
237 ependent membrane insertion exhibited normal fusion pore opening probabilities but the fusion pores d
238 two ways, enhancing an early step leading to fusion pore opening, and slowing a later step when fusio
239 Brief spiking activity triggered a transient fusion pore opening, followed by immediate retrieval of
240 -SNARE membrane favors a mechanism of direct fusion pore opening, whereas low cholesterol favors a me
244 ent signal enables detection of DCV docking, fusion-pore opening, and vesicle collapse into the plana
245 se indicate that G100V/C103V retards initial fusion-pore opening, hinders its expansion and leads to
247 chanisms for activity-evoked and spontaneous fusion pore openings with the latter sharing features of
248 reformation; (b) kiss-and-run, in which the fusion pore opens and closes; and (c) compound exocytosi
250 espond to the rapid opening and closing of a fusion pore (or "kiss-and-run") with a median opening ti
251 explained by a direct action of Rab3A on the fusion pore, or by Rab3A-dependent control of vesicles w
252 perometry current was introduced that yields fusion pore permeability divided by vesicle volume (g/V)
253 Unlike syx, the syb2 residues that influence fusion pore permeation fell along two alpha-helical face
254 mpare the shape and energies of the membrane fusion pore predicted by coarse-grained (MARTINI) and co
255 clusion, cAMP-mediated stabilization of wide fusion pores prevents vesicles from proceeding to the fu
257 inal residues (SNAP-25Delta9) showed changed fusion pore properties, suggesting a model for fusion po
261 etrieval of vesicles without dilation of the fusion pore, resulting in very little BDNF secretion at
262 The estimated pore-electrode distance and fusion pore size for disk electrodes are 239 and 11.5 nm
263 the fusion pore and the electrode as well as fusion pore size, which leads to different average spike
264 25B or Syt1 had complex effects on transient fusion pore stability in a stimulus-specific manner.
268 less tightly zipped and may lead to a longer fusion pore structure, consistent with the observed decr
270 ned with vesicles until full dilation of the fusion pore, supporting potential coupling with SNARE fu
272 are released through fluctuating exocytotic fusion pores that can flicker open and shut multiple tim
274 lter small molecules through a size-limiting fusion pore, the activation of isoforms that favor kiss-
276 partner to syx in completing a proteinaceous fusion pore through the vesicle membrane, but the role o
278 nd the host membrane, and the formation of a fusion pore through which the viral genome is transferre
279 ell membranes, resulting in the formation of fusion pores through which the viral genome is released.
280 mplex assembly and rapid (micro-millisecond) fusion pore transitions, and to define the role of acces
285 oscopy imaging, we found that the exocytotic fusion pore was generated from the SNARE-dependent fusio
287 the quantity necessary for the formation of fusion pores, we treat cells with ATP to stimulate Ca2+-
288 loss of Rab3A could be due to malfunctioning fusion pores, we used carbon fibre amperometry to record
289 on and fusion were significantly shorter and fusion pores were larger in dynamic endosomes than in mo
290 bility that a synaptic vesicle will open its fusion pore when the fusion machinery of the vesicle is
291 urotransmitters are released through nascent fusion pores, which ordinarily dilate after bilayer fusi
292 of cell-cell contact, giving rise to nascent fusion pores whose expansion establishes full cytoplasmi
293 transient deformations consistent with rapid fusion pore widening after exocytosis; a Dyn1 mutant wit
294 a Dyn1 mutant with decreased activity slowed fusion pore widening by stabilizing postfusion granule m
297 hat, additionally, tPA itself stabilizes the fusion pore with dimensions that restrict its own exit.
298 gered exocytosis begins with a proteinaceous fusion pore with less stressed membrane, and becomes lip
299 n, while direct transition from a stalk to a fusion pore without a hemifusion intermediate is highly
300 he stalk energy and the energy of catenoidal fusion pores would decrease by tens of k(B)T relative to