Stimulus-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of Munc18c was investigated as a potential regulatory mechanism by which the Munc18c-Syntaxin 4 complex can be dissociated in response to divergent stimuli in multiple cell types. Use of [ 32 P]orthophosphate incorporation, pervanadate treatment, and phosphotyrosine-specific antibodies demonstrated that Munc18c underwent tyrosine phosphorylation. Phosphorylation was apparent under basal conditions, but levels were significantly increased within 5 min of glucose stimulation in MIN6 beta cells. Tyrosine phosphorylation of Munc18c was also detected in 3T3L1 adipocytes and increased with insulin stimulation, suggesting that this may be a conserved mechanism. Syntaxin 4 binding to Munc18c decreased as Munc18c phosphorylation levels increased in pervanadate-treated cells, suggesting that phosphorylation dissociates the Munc18c-Syntaxin 4 complex. Munc18c phosphorylation was localized to the N-terminal 255 residues. Mutagenesis of one residue in this region, Y219F, significantly increased the affinity of Munc18c for Syntaxin 4, whereas mutation of three other candidate sites was without effect. Moreover, Munc18c-Y219F expression in MIN6 cells functionally inhibited glucose-stimulated SNARE complex formation and insulin granule exocytosis. These data support a novel and conserved mechanism for the dissociation of Munc18c-Syntaxin 4 complexes in a stimulus-dependent manner to facilitate the increase in Syntaxin 4-VAMP2 association and to promote vesicle/granule fusion.In the early 1990s, the discovery of soluble N-ethylmaleimidesensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) 2 proteins elucidated the molecular basis for synaptic vesicle exocytosis (1, 2). Vesicle exocytosis entails the pairing of a vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP) SNARE with a binary cognate receptor complex at the target membrane composed of SNAP-25/23 and syntaxin proteins (target SNAREs) to form the SNARE core complex (3-7). Shortly thereafter, SNARE protein complexes were identified and found to regulate secretory processes in many diverse cell types ranging from yeast and Caenorhabditis elegans to humans, which has led to the general concept that most types of regulated vesicle fusion occur by a common mechanism.Concurrent with the discovery of SNARE proteins was the discovery of the yeast Sec1 secretory protein, which was found to interact directly with the target SNARE syntaxin (8). Homologs in C. elegans (UNC-18), Drosophila melanogaster (ROP), and mammalian cells (Munc18a-c) were also identified (9 -13). Collectively, the Sec1 and Munc18 protein families are now referred to as "SM" proteins for Sec1 and Munc18. Munc18 proteins are ϳ66 -68 kDa in size and are soluble factors with no transmembrane domain (14). They are found localized to the cytosol and also to the plasma membrane through high affinity binding to their cognate syntaxin (15, 16). Munc18a (also known as Munc18-1/neural Sec1/rat brain Sec1) was demonstrated to interact with Syntaxin 1 in a manner mutually exclusive of the other...