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1.
Recent experimental evidence suggesting that presynaptic depolarization can evoke transmitter release without calcium influx has been re-examined. The presynaptic terminal of the squid giant synapse can be depolarized by variable amounts while recording presynaptic calcium current under voltage clamp and postsynaptic responses. Small depolarizations open few calcium channels with large single channel currents. Large depolarizations approaching the calcium equilibrium potential open many channels with small single channel currents. When responses to small and large depolarizations eliciting similar total macroscopic calcium currents are compared, the large pulses evoke more transmitter release. This apparent voltage-dependence of transmitter release may be explained by the greater overlap of calcium concentration domains surrounding single open calcium channels when many closely apposed channels open at large depolarizations. This channel domain overlap leads to higher calcium concentrations at transmitter release sites and more release for large depolarizations than for small depolarizations which open few widely dispersed channels. At neuromuscular junctions, a subthreshold depolarizing pulse to motor nerve terminals may release over a thousand times as much transmitter if it follows a brief train of presynaptic action potentials than if it occurs in isolation. This huge synaptic facilitation has been taken as indicative of a direct effect of voltage which is manifest only when prior activity raises presynaptic resting calcium levels. This large facilitation is actually due to a post-tetanic supernormal excitability in motor nerve terminals, causing the previously subthreshold test pulse to become suprathreshold and elicit a presynaptic action potential. When motor nerve terminals are depolarized by two pulses, as the first pulse increases above a certain level it evokes more transmitter release but less facilitation of the response to the second pulse.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The modern data about the structure and function of the nerve ending ion channels are generalized and systematized. Ion channels of nerve endings provide the forming of the rest membrane potential, excitability, generation of action potential, regulate the intracellular concentration of calcium ions, take part in exocytosis of synaptic vesicules, participate in short-term and long-term synaptic plasticity, ensure the modulation of presynaptic functions. Methods of investigation of ion channels and data about their localization in central and peripheral nerve systems are represented. The review gives the functional characteristics, molecular structure and mechanisms of regulation of the known voltage- and ligand-dependent ion channels, the role of the certain types of ion channels in the machinery of transmitter release.  相似文献   

3.
The presynaptic nerve terminal is of key importance in communication in the nervous system. Its primary role is to release transmitter quanta on the arrival of an appropriate stimulus. The structural basis of these transmitter quanta are the synaptic vesicles that fuse with the surface membrane of the nerve terminal, to release their content of neurotransmitter molecules and other vesicular components. We subdivide the control of quantal release into two major classes: the processes that take place before the fusion of the synaptic vesicle with the surface membrane (the pre-fusion control) and the processes that occur after the fusion of the vesicle (the post-fusion control). The pre-fusion control is the main determinant of transmitter release. It is achieved by a wide variety of cellular components, among them the ion channels. There are reports of several hundred different ion channel molecules at the surface membrane of the nerve terminal, that for convenience can be grouped into eight major categories. They are the voltage-dependent calcium channels, the potassium channels, the calcium-gated potassium channels, the sodium channels, the chloride channels, the non-selective channels, the ligand gated channels and the stretch-activated channels. There are several categories of intracellular channels in the mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum and the synaptic vesicles. We speculate that the vesicle channels may be of an importance in the post-fusion control of transmitter release.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated synaptic ultrastructure of individual nerve ending varicosities at the Drosophila larval neuromuscular junction in transgenic larvae overexpressing the learning gene dunce (dnc) in the nervous system. It was previously shown that cAMP is reduced to one-third normal in these larvae and that they have fewer nerve terminal varicosities and smaller junction potentials, although transmitter release from individual nerve ending varicosities is not significantly altered. We tested the hypothesis that synaptic ultrastructure is modified to compensate for possible reduced efficacy of synaptic transmission resulting from lower than normal cAMP. Synaptic size and number of presynaptic dense bodies (active zone structures) per synapse are modestly enhanced in transgenic larvae overexpressing the dnc gene product and in rutabaga (rut(1)) mutant larvae, which have reduced adenylyl cyclase activity and reduced neural cAMP. The incidence of complex synapses (possessing 2 or more presynaptic dense bodies) was not consistently different in experimental larvae compared to controls. The observations suggest that chronic reduction of cAMP levels in the nervous system of Drosophila larvae, although leading to a modest compensatory change in synaptic structure, does not markedly alter several synaptic ultrastructural parameters which are thought to influence the strength of transmitter release; thus, homeostatic mechanisms do not act to maintain normal-sized junction potentials by altering synaptic structure.  相似文献   

5.
A one-dimensional model of presynaptic calcium diffusion away from the membrane, with cytoplasmic binding, extrusion by a surface pump, and influx during action potentials, can account for the rapid decay of phasic transmitter release and the slower decay of synaptic facilitation following one spike, as well as the very slow decline in total free calcium observed experimentally. However, simulations using this model, and alternative versions in which calcium uptake into organelles and saturable binding are included, fail to preserve phasic transmitter release to spikes in a long tetanus. A three-dimensional diffusion model was developed, in which calcium enters through discrete membrane channels and acts to release transmitter within 50 nm of entry points. Analytic solutions of the equations of this model, in which calcium channels were distributed in active zone patches based on ultrastructural observations, were successful in predicting synaptic facilitation, phasic release to tetanic spikes, and the accumulation of total free calcium. The effects of varying calcium buffering, pump rate, and channel number and distribution were explored. Versions appropriate to squid giant synapses and frog neuromuscular junctions were simulated. Limitations of key assumptions, particularly rapid nonsaturable binding, are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Membrane potential was recorded intracellularly near presynaptic terminals of the excitor axon of the crayfish opener neuromuscular junction (NMJ), while transmitter release was recorded postsynaptically. This study focused on the effects of a presynaptic calcium-activated potassium conductance, gK(Ca), on the transmitter release evoked by single and paired depolarizing current pulses. Blocking gK(Ca) by adding tetraethylammonium ion (TEA; 5-20 mM) to a solution containing tetrodotoxin and aminopyridines caused the relation between presynaptic potential and transmitter release to steepen and shift to less depolarized potentials. When two depolarizing current pulses were applied at 20-ms intervals with gK(Ca) not blocked, the presynaptic voltage change to the second (test) pulse was inversely related to the amplitude of the first (conditioning) pulse. This effect of the conditioning prepulse on the response to the test pulse was eliminated by 20 mM TEA and by solutions containing 0 mM Ca2+/1 mM EGTA, suggesting that the reduction in the amplitude of the test pulse was due to activation of gK(Ca) by calcium remaining from the conditioning pulse. In the absence of TEA, facilitation of transmitter release evoked by a test pulse increased as the conditioning pulse grew from -40 to -20 mV, but then decreased with further increase in the conditioning depolarization. A similar nonmonotonic relationship between facilitation and the amplitude of the conditioning depolarization was reported in previous studies using extracellular recording, and interpreted as supporting an additional voltage-dependent step in the activation of transmitter release. We suggest that this result was due instead to activation of a gK(Ca) by the conditioning depolarization, since facilitation of transmitter release increased monotonically with the amplitude of the conditioning depolarization, and the early time course of the decay of facilitation was prolonged when gK(Ca) was blocked. The different time courses for decay of the presynaptic potential (20 ms) and facilitation (greater than 50 ms) suggest either that residual free calcium does not account for facilitation at the crayfish NMJ or that the transmitter release mechanism has a markedly higher affinity or stoichiometry for internal free calcium than does gK(Ca). Finally, our data suggest that the calcium channels responsible for transmitter release at the crayfish NMJ are not of the L, N, or T type.  相似文献   

7.
IT is known from earlier studies of regeneration of neuromuscular synapses in the frog1 that the nerve fibres return to the region of the original end-plate and that there is a time after the ending has re-established synaptic contact during which a nerve impulse fails to evoke transmitter release, even though spontaneous release occurs. Even after neuromuscular transmission is restored, the response latency is longer than usual and the nerve is more liable to presynaptic failure of propagation1. This study is part of an attempt to examine in more detail the characteristics of transmitter release during this period.  相似文献   

8.
It is well known that antagonists of N-type voltage-gated calcium channels inhibit the evoked quantal release of acetylcholine in amphibian neuromuscular synapses. This, however, does not exclude the functional expression of other types of voltage-gated calcium channels in these nerve terminals. Using immunocytochemistry, we detected the expression of the alpha1A subunit of P/Q-type calcium channels (that is otherwise typical of mammalian motor nerve endings) in the frog neuromuscular junction. In addition, we demonstrated that the P/Q-type channel blocker omega-agatoxin IVA (20 nM) reduced the action potential-induced calcium transient and significantly decreased both spontaneous and evoked mediator release. Our data indicates the functional expression of P/Q-type calcium channels in the frog motor nerve ending which participate in acetylcholine release.  相似文献   

9.
The mechanism of action of chlordimeform on the mealworm nerve-muscle preparation was studied with microelectrodes. Chlordimeform affected neither the mean amplitude nor the frequency of spontaneous miniature excitatory postsynaptic potentials. Extracellular focal recordings show that in the presence of 0.8 mM chlordimeform the presynaptic spike is almost unchanged, but the quantal content for evoked transmitter release is reduced. It is suggested that chlordimeform decreases the influx of calcium at the presynaptic terminal during the active phase of the nerve terminal action potential, thereby inhibiting evoked transmitter release.  相似文献   

10.
Voltage-gated calcium channels couple changes in membrane potential to neuronal functions regulated by calcium, including neurotransmitter release. Here we report that presynaptic N-type calcium channels not only control neurotransmitter release but also regulate synaptic growth at Drosophila neuromuscular junctions. In a screen for behavioral mutants that disrupt synaptic transmission, an allele of the N-type calcium channel locus (Dmca1A) was identified that caused synaptic undergrowth. The underlying molecular defect was identified as a neutralization of a charged residue in the third S4 voltage sensor. RNA interference reduction of N-type calcium channel expression also reduced synaptic growth. Hypomorphic mutations in syntaxin-1A or n-synaptobrevin, which also disrupt neurotransmitter release, did not affect synapse proliferation at the neuromuscular junction, suggesting calcium entry through presynaptic N-type calcium channels, not neurotransmitter release per se, is important for synaptic growth. The reduced synapse proliferation in Dmca1A mutants is not due to increased synapse retraction but instead reflects a role for calcium influx in synaptic growth mechanisms. These results suggest N-type channels participate in synaptic growth through signaling pathways that are distinct from those that mediate neurotransmitter release. Linking presynaptic voltage-gated calcium entry to downstream calcium-sensitive synaptic growth regulators provides an efficient activity-dependent mechanism for modifying synaptic strength.  相似文献   

11.
Following the gradual recognition of the importance of intracellular calcium stores for somatodendritic signaling in the mammalian brain, recent reports have also indicated a significant role of presynaptic calcium stores. Ryanodine-sensitive stores generate local, random calcium signals that shape spontaneous transmitter release. They amplify spike-driven calcium signals in presynaptic terminals, and consequently enhance the efficacy of transmitter release. They appear to be recruited by an association with certain types of calcium-permeant ion channels, and they induce specific forms of synaptic plasticity. Recent research also indicates a role of inositoltrisphosphate-sensitive presynaptic calcium stores in synaptic plasticity.  相似文献   

12.
Zefirov AL  Gafurov OSh 《Biofizika》2000,45(3):556-564
The influence of both growth and branching of a nerve terminal on the asynchronism of transmitter release and the time-course of evoked postsynaptic responses was investigated using a model of a frog neuromuscular synapse in which the nerve terminal represents a population of spatially isolated active zones. It was shown that the appearance of additional branching in proximal parts of the nerve ending leads to decrease in the asynchronism of transmitter release, an increase in quantum content and the amplitude of the postsynaptic signal, and the shortening of its phase of growth. It was found that the asynchronism of transmitter release has a much stronger influence on the time-course of end plate currents compared with end plate potentials. The factors strengthening and weakening the asynchronism of transmitter release in a neuromuscular synapse and the reasons for various length and branching of vertebrate nerve terminals are considered.  相似文献   

13.
In experiments on the frog cutaneous pectoris muscle in cases of different external calcium concentrations, using extracellular recording technique, processes of facilitation and depression of transmitter release during the high-frequency stimulation were investigated. On the ground of experiments using intracellular mobile calcium buffers BAPTA-AM and EGTA-AM, it was proposed that at least two (low- and high-affinity) calcium-binding sites underlie the facilitation. Both the facilitation and the depression were accompanied by such transformations of underlied of nerve ending responses as changes of the third phase amplitude. Application of potassium channel blockers allowed us to reveal the significant contribution of changes of duration of the AP repolarisation phase and, accordingly, the changes of magnitude of calcium influx to development of facilitation and depression of transmitter release. It was also revealed that, during the high-frequency rhythmic stimulation, the increase of asynchrony of transmitter release leading to decrease of facilitation and increase of depression occurred. It was concluded that the forms of short-term synaptic plasticity--facilitation and depression, were caused by various presynaptic mechanisms: the increase of concentration of "local" and accumulation of "residual" calcium, the changes of calcium influx, increase of temporal course of secretion, the impairment of equilibrium between the depletion and restoration of mediator supply. Due to some of these processes and specific conditions of synapse functioning, the facilitation of the depression of transmitter release occurred.  相似文献   

14.
Transmitter release sites were located in the motor nerve ending of the frog cutaneous-pectoris muscle using three extracellular electrodes. Transmitter release sites were found to be grouped in a direction cutting across the nerve ending and reflecting transmitter release and active release zones (AZ). Measurements from these groups showed that most transmitter release takes place at the center of the AZ, declining towards the periphery and to either side of this zone. All AZ were found to take place in spontaneous release with a low extracellular concentration of calcium ions present, compared with only a proportion in evoked release. Advantages of the triple as opposed to the dual micro-electrode technique are analyzed. It was found that transmitter release in spatially isolated AZ at the nerve ending leads to a polymodal distribution pattern of the amplitude of uniquantal signals during extracellular recording. The part played by AZ in transmitter release is discussed.S. V. Kurashov Medical Institute, Ministry of Health of the RSFSR, Moscow. V. I. Ul'yanov-Lenin State University, Kazan'. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 22, No. 3, pp. 318–327, May–June, 1990.  相似文献   

15.
The minimal presynaptic depolarization (MPD) for producing a detectable postsynaptic potential (PSP) was lower than 25 mv in normal or tetrodotoxin (TTX)-containing seawater. The MPD was about 10 mv when a small amount of tetraethylammonium ions (TEA) was injected into the presynaptic terminal. Application of linearly increasing depolarizing current to the normal presynaptic terminal at times produced a PSP before a presynaptic spike was evoked; the rate of rise of the resulting PSP was much slower than that of a PSP triggered by the normal presynaptic spike. A brief depolarizing pulse that preceded the presynaptic spike in normal seawater or the initial transient presynaptic depolarization in TTX decreased the PSP. It increased the PSP when it was applied during the spike or initial transient depolarization. Hyperpolarizing pulses had the reverse effect. The Off-PSP was also modified by inserting pulses at an initial part of the recovery phase of the strong presynaptic depolarization. These results indicate further that increases in Na+ and K+ conductance during presynaptic spike activity are not a requirement for transmitter release; the rate of release of transmitter can be controlled by electrical manipulation of the presynaptic terminal; there is a superficial correspondence between the time courses of presynaptic depolarization and the resulting PSP. Thus presynaptic depolarization appears to be only the first step in the series of events constituting excitation-transmitter release coupling. It may not be a necessary step for the release mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
In the neuromuscular junction, blockade of potassium channels can produce multiple discharges after single nerve stimulation. Multielectrode recording from the nerve trunk and myelinated and non-myelinated parts of the nerve ending demonstrated that repetitive presynaptic spikes elicited by 4-aminopyridine arise earliest within the part of the axon proximal to the motor nerve ending.  相似文献   

17.
N- and P/Q-type calcium channels are localized in high density in presynaptic nerve terminals and are crucial elements in neuronal excitation–secretion coupling. In addition to mediating Ca2+ entry to initiate transmitter release, they are thought to interact directly with proteins of the synaptic vesicle docking/fusion machinery. As outlined in the preceding article, these calcium channels can be purified from brain as a complex with SNARE proteins which are involved in exocytosis. In addition, N-type and P/Q-type calcium channels are co-localized with syntaxin in high-density clusters in nerve terminals. Here we review the role of the synaptic protein interaction (synprint) sites in the intracellular loop II–III (LII–III) of both 1B and 1A subunits of N-type and P/Q-type calcium channels, which bind to syntaxin, SNAP-25, and synaptotagmin. Calcium has a biphasic effect on the interactions of N-type calcium channels with SNARE complexes, stimulating optimal binding in the range of 10–20 M. PKC or CaM KII phosphorylation of the N-type synprint peptide inhibits interactions with native brain SNARE complexes containing syntaxin and SNAP-25. Introduction of the synprint peptides into presynaptic superior cervical ganglion neurons reversibly inhibits EPSPs from synchronous transmitter release by 42%. At physiological Ca2+ concentrations, synprint peptides cause an approximate 25% reduction in transmitter release of injected frog neuromuscular junction in cultures, consistent with detachment of 70% of the docked vesicles from calcium channels based on a theoretical model. Together, these studies suggest that presynaptic calcium channels not only provide the calcium signal required by the exocytotic machinery, but also contain structural elements that are integral to vesicle docking, priming, and fusion processes.  相似文献   

18.
R J Miller 《FASEB journal》1990,4(15):3291-3299
Ca2+ influx into the nerve terminal is normally the trigger for the release of neurotransmitters. Many neurons possess presynaptic receptors whose activation results in changes in the quantity of neurotransmitter released by an action potential. This paper reviews studies that show that presynaptic receptors can regulate the activity of Ca2+ channels in the nerve terminal, resulting in changes in the influx of Ca2+ and in neurotransmitter release. Neurons possess several different types of voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels. Ca2+ influx through N-type channels appears to trigger transmitter release in many instances. In other cases Ca2+ influx through L channels can influence transmitter release. Neurotransmitters can inhibit N channels through a G protein-mediated transduction mechanism. The G proteins are frequently pertussis toxin substrates. Inhibition of N channels appears to involve changes in their voltage dependence. Neurotransmitters can also regulate neuronal K+ channels. Activation of these K+ channels can lead to a reduction in Ca2+ influx and neurotransmitter release; these effects are also mediated by G proteins. Thus neurotransmitters may often regulate both presynaptic Ca2+ and K+ channels. These two effects may be synergistic mechanisms for the regulation of Ca2+ influx and neurotransmitter release.  相似文献   

19.
The modern condition of knowledge about the molecular mechanisms underlying the quantal transmitter release in the central and the peripheric synapses is analysed. The data about the synaptic vesicles types, their forming, transporting to the sites of release at the nerve endings, exo- and endocytosis processes are presented. Ultrastructural and molecular organization of active zone of nerve ending and transmitter release morphofunctional unit--secretosome, which includes synaptic vesicle, exocytosis protein complex and calcium channels, are described. The basic proteins involved in the exo- and endocytosis and their interactions during transmitter release are examined. The role of the intracellular buffer systems, calcium micro- and macrodomains in the quantal transmitter secretion are considered. The reasons of the active zones functional non-uniformity and plasticity and factors reduced transmitter release in the active zone to the single quantum are analysed.  相似文献   

20.
Chan AW  Owens S  Tung C  Stanley EF 《Cell calcium》2007,42(4-5):419-425
Presynaptic CaV2.2 (N type) calcium channels gate the influx of calcium ions to trigger transmitter release. We have previously demonstrated at the chick ciliary ganglion presynaptic calyx terminal that the bulk of these channels are highly resistant to voltage dependent inactivation [E.F. Stanley, G. Goping, Characterization of a calcium current in a vertebrate cholinergic presynaptic nerve terminal, J. Neurosci. 11 (1991) 985-993; E.F. Stanley, Syntaxin I modulation of presynaptic calcium channel inactivation revealed by botulinum toxin C1, Eur. J. Neurosci. 17 (2003) 1303-1305; E.F. Stanley, R.R. Mirotznik, Cleavage of syntaxin prevents G-protein regulation of presynaptic calcium channels, Nature (Lond.) 385 (1997) 340-343]. Recent studies have suggested that CaV2.2 can be rendered inactivation resistant when expressed with the palmitoylated beta2A subunit and that this effect can be eliminated by tunicamycin, a general inhibitor of dynamic palmitoylation [J.H. Hurley, A.L. Cahill, K.P. Currie, A.P. Fox, The role of dynamic palmitoylation in Ca(2+) channel inactivation, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97 (2000) 9293-9298]. We find that while tunicamycin treatment had no effect on CaV2.2 current in the inactivation-sensitive isolated chick dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neuron, it caused a 10mV hyperpolarized shift in the profile of the inactivation-resistant presynaptic CaV2.2 population. This shift occurred without any effect on the voltage sensitivity of the inactivation process, as measured by a Boltzmann slope factor. Our findings suggest that dynamic palmitoylation contributes to the hyperpolarized steady inactivation profile of presynaptic CaV2.2. However, some other factor must also contribute since its inhibition does is not restore the inactivation profile to that of channels in the cell soma.  相似文献   

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