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1.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(6):1737-1744
The crude extract of venom glands of the polychaete annelid Glycera convoluta triggers a large Ca2+-dependent acetylcholine release from both frog motor nerve terminals and Torpedo electric organ synaptosomes. This extract was partially purified by Concanavalin A affinity chromatography. The biological activity was correlated in both preparations to a 300,000-dalton band, as shown by gel electrophoresis. This confirmed previous determinations obtained with chromatographic methods. This glycoprotein binds to presynaptic but not postsynaptic plasma membranes isolated from Torpedo electric organ. Pretreatment of intact synaptosomes by pronase abolished both the binding and the venom- induced acetylcholine release without impairing the high K+-induced acetylcholine release. Pretreatment of nerve terminal membranes by Concanavalin A similarly prevented the binding and the biological response. Binding to Torpedo membranes was still observed in the presence of EGTA. An antiserum directed to venom glycoproteins inhibited the neurotoxin so we could directly follow its binding to the presynaptic membrane. Glycera convoluta neurotoxin has to bind to a ectocellularly oriented protein of the presynaptic terminal to induce transmitter release.  相似文献   

2.
The release of acetylcholine (ACh) from instantly frozen Torpedo electric organ synaptosomes in the course of stimulation is systematically associated with an increase in the number of large intramembrane particles counted on freeze-fracture replicas. The drug cetiedil, which is a potent inhibitor of ACh release, also blocks the increase in the number of large particles. The blockage was studied either after ionophore A 23187 or Glycera neurotoxin action in the presence of calcium.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of several phospholipase A2 neurotoxins from snake venoms were examined on purely cholinergic synaptosomes from Torpedo electric organ. The noncatalytic component A of crotoxin had no effect, whereas its phospholipase component B, used alone or complexed to component A, elicited a rapid and dose-dependent acetylcholine (ACh) release and a depolarization of the preparation. Subsequent ACh release evoked by high K+ levels or calcium ionophore was identical to the control after the action of component A but reduced after the action of crotoxin or of component B. These effects were not observed when the phospholipase A2 activity of the toxin was blocked either by replacing Ca2+ by Ba2+ (respectively, activator and inhibitor of phospholipase A2) or by alkylation of component B with p-bromophenacyl bromide. beta-Bungarotoxin, another very potent phospholipase A2 neurotoxin, induced release of little ACh, did not affect ionophore-evoked ACh release, but significantly reduced depolarization-induced ACh release. The single-chain phospholipase A2 neurotoxin agkistrodotoxin behaved like crotoxin component B. A nonneurotoxic phospholipase A2 from mammalian pancrease induced release of an amount of ACh similar to that released by crotoxin but did not affect the evoked responses. The obvious differences in effect of the various neurotoxins suggest that they exert their specific actions on the excitation-secretion coupling process at different sites or by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Botulinum neurotoxin type A (BoNTx) inhibits the release of acetylcholine (ACh) from Torpedo electric organ synaptosomes. We have studied several biochemical and morphological aspects in order to characterize the molecular interactions of BoNTx intoxication in our preparation. 1. We are describing for the first time an electrophoretic band from cholinergic presynaptic plasma membrane (PSPM) that is recognized by 125I-BoNTx as a putative BoNTx receptor. 2. Furthermore we describe direct interaction of botulinum toxin-gold complexes with synaptic vesicles through the three-step model of the BoNTx intoxication.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of cetiedil, a vasodilatator substance with reported anticholinergic properties, were examined on cholinergic presynaptic functions at the nerve electroplaque junction of Torpedo marmorata using either synaptosomes or slices of intact tissue. Cetiedil abolished the calcium-dependent release of acetylcholine (ACh) triggered by depolarization or by addition of A23187 ionophore, a finding localizing the site of action downstream from the calcium entry step. In addition, a direct effect on the release process itself was indicated by the observation that cetiedil blocks the release of ACh mediated by a recently isolated presynaptic membrane protein, the mediatophore, reconstituted into ACh-containing proteoliposomes. In all three preparations, ACh release was inhibited by cetiedil with a Ki of 5-8 microM. Under the conditions used in these release experiments, the synthesis of ACh and its compartmentation within the nerve terminals were not modified. However, the drug was able to reduce high-affinity choline uptake and vesicular ACh incorporation when it was given together with the radioactive precursor, a result showing that cetiedil has a broad inhibitory action on cholinergic uptake processes.  相似文献   

6.
Cholinergic synaptic vesicles obtained from Torpedo electric organ have an active transport system for acetylcholine (ACh). Linked to ACh transport is a cytoplasmically oriented receptor for the inhibitory drug (-)-trans-2-(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (vesamicol, formerly AH5183). Storage of freshly isolated vesicles for several days leads to more vesamicol binding. This can be induced immediately by hyposmotic lysis of the vesicles, which reseal to form right-side-out ghosts. The increased drug binding was due to a twofold increase in the affinity and a 20% increase in the amount of the receptor expressed, probably as a result of the release of an endogenous factor. Binding of vesamicol to ghosts was specifically inhibited by exogenous ACh acting with a dissociation constant of 18 mM. This suggests that the vesamicol binding site probably is linked to a low-affinity ACh binding site that is different from the higher affinity transport binding site. Equilibrium and kinetic attempts to determine whether exogenous ACh acts on the outside or the inside of the ghost membrane to inhibit vesamicol binding failed because of rapid equilibration of exogenous ACh across the ghost membrane. It is argued that the endogenous factor released by hyposmotic lysis might be ACh. Potential roles for such a transmembrane signal regulating the vesamicol receptor are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The release of acetylcholine: from a cellular towards a molecular mechanism   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The isolation of synaptic vesicles rich in acetylcholine (ACh) from the electric organ of Torpedo has indeed strengthened the hypothesis of transmitter exocytosis, but soon after it was found that non-vesicular free ACh was released and renewed upon stimulation. In contrast, vesicular ACh and the number of vesicles remained stable during physiological stimulations. In addition free ACh variations (representing the cytoplasmic pool) were correlated to the release kinetics as measured by the electroplaque discharge. Consequently, the mechanism releasing ACh from the cytoplasm in a packet form was searched at the presynaptic membrane itself. With synaptosomes isolated from the electric organ of Torpedo, it became possible to freeze them rapidly at the peak of ACh release and study their membrane and contents after cryofracture. A statistical analysis showed that the main structural change was the occurrence of large intramembrane particles at the peak of ACh release and under all release conditions. This impressive change contrasted with the stability in the number of vesicles. Another role for the vesicle was envisaged during intense stimulations when the cytoplasmic ACh and ATP pools become exhausted. The decrease in ATP leads to an increase in calcium and protons in the cytoplasm; this signals the depletion of vesicular ACh and ATP stores in the cytoplasm. Release can go on, while ATP promotes the uptake of calcium by vesicles. At the end of its cycle the vesicle will be full of calcium and will perhaps release it. As far as the mechanism of ACh release is concerned it probably depends on a membrane component (perhaps the large particles) activated by calcium and able to translocate ACh in a quantal or subquantal form. In most recent work we showed that if a lyophilized presynaptic membrane was used to make proteoliposomes filled with ACh, they released ACh upon calcium action.  相似文献   

8.
The rate of translocation of newly synthesized acetylcholine (ACh) from the presynaptic cytosol of Torpedo electric organ nerve terminals into synaptic vesicles and the extent to which ACh release from these neurons is mediated by a vesicular mechanism were investigated. For this purpose the compound 2(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (AH5183), which inhibits the active transport of ACh into isolated cholinergic synaptic vesicles, was employed. Preincubation of purified Torpedo nerve terminals (synaptosomes) with AH5183 does not affect the intraterminal synthesis of [3H]ACh but results in a marked inhibition (85%) of its Ca2+-dependent K+-evoked release. By contrast, the evoked release of the endogenous nonlabeled ACh is not affected by this compound. When AH5183 is added during radiolabeling, it causes a progressively smaller inhibition of [3H]ACh release which is completely abolished if the drug is added after the preparation has been labeled. These findings suggest that most of the newly synthesized synaptosomal [3H]ACh (85%) is released by a vesicular mechanism and that some [3H]ACh (15%) may be released by a different process. The translocation of cytosolic [3H]ACh into the synaptic vesicles was monitored by determining the time course of the loss of susceptibility of [3H]ACh release to AH5183. It was found not to be coupled kinetically to [3H]ACh synthesis and to lag behind it. The nature of the intraterminal processes underlying this lag is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract: Using isolated cholinergic synaptosomes prepared from Torpedo electric organ, we studied the effects of N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) on acetylcholine (ACh) synthesis, compartmentation, and release after stimulation. Whereas ACh synthesis was unchanged, ACh compartmentation inside synaptosomes was affected by the presence of DCCD. In resting conditions, the uptake into the synaptic vesicle pool of newly synthesized ACh (i.e., [14C]ACh synthesized in the presence of the drug) was progressively and markedly inhibited as the duration of DCCD preincubation was increased, whereas compartmentation of endogenous ACh was unchanged in the presence of DCCD. After stimulation, the release of endogenous ACh from DCCD-treated synaptosomes was similar to that of control, in contrast to the release of [14C]ACh, which was markedly inhibited. This inhibition was observed whatever the conditions of stimulation used (gramicidin D, calcium ionophore A23187, or KCI depolarization). The study of the compartmentation of [14C]ACh during stimulation revealed a transfer of highly labeled ACh from the free to the bound ACh compartment in the presence of DCCD, suggesting the existence of several ACh subcompartments within the free and bound ACh pools. The present results are discussed in comparison with the previously reported effects of vesamicol (AH5183) on ACh compartmentation and release.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: The release of acetylcholine (ACh) and ATP from pure cholinergic synaptosomes isolated from the electric organ of Torpedo was studied in the same perfused sample. A presynaptic ATP release was demonstrated either by depolarization with KCl or after the action of a venom extracted from the annelid Glycera convoluta (GV). The release of ATP exhibited similar kinetics to that of ACh release and was therefore probably closely related to the latter. The ACh/ATP ratio in perfusates after KCl depolarization was 45; this was much higher than the ACh/ATP ratio in cholinergic synaptic vesicles, which was 5. The ACh/ATP ratio released after the action of GV was also higher than that of synaptic vesicles. These differences are discussed. The stoichiometry of ACh and ATP release is not consistent with the view that the whole synaptic vesicle content is released by exocytosis after KCl depolarization, as is the case for chromatin cells in the adrenal medulla.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of ionic permeability changes on acetylcholine (ACh) release from isolated cholinergic synaptic vesicles of Torpedo was studied using a chemiluminescent method for continuous ACh detection. Vesicles rendered freely permeable to potassium by valinomycin lost most of their ACh content in K+ media, if the accompanying anion was permeant; it thus appeared that ACh leakage occurred as the result of internal osmotic changes. Upon addition of ionophores that catalyse monovalent cation/H+ exchange (gramicidin D or a mixture of valinomycin plus protonophore FCCP), a rapid but transient ACh release was observed. Surprisingly, nigericin which also catalyses K+/H+ exchange, had no effect on ACh release. The divalent cation ionophore A23187 promoted ACh release only when calcium (and not magnesium) was introduced into the external medium in a millimolar concentration range. As the simultaneous addition of the protonophore FCCP and A23187 decreased this calcium-dependent ACh leakage, a releasing effect of A23187 through Ca2+/H+ exchange is suspected. The present results emphasise the role of internal protons for ACh retention inside synaptic vesicles.  相似文献   

12.
Preincubation of intact, purely cholinergic Torpedo synaptosomes with [32P]Pi results in the incorporation of 32P into about 10 specific proteins. Depolarizing the Torpedo synaptosomes by a high K+ buffer or treatment with the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 result in Ca2+ uptake, in acetylcholine (ACh) release, and in a marked increase of 32P incorporation into a specific protein band with an apparent subunit molecular weight of 100,000 (band alpha). The kinetics of synaptosomal 45Ca2+ uptake, of 32P incorporation into band alpha, and of ACh release is similar and reach maximal values about 45 s after the synaptosomes have been treated. Sr2+ and Ba2+ can replace Ca2+ in evoking both K+ depolarization-dependent ACh release and 32P incorporation into band alpha. The effectiveness of these ions (Ca2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+) is similar in both cases. The data presented suggest that Ca2+ accumulation by Torpedo synaptosomes leads to an increase in the phosphorylation of a specific protein and to ACh release. This phosphoprotein may be involved in the regulation of presynaptic processes which underly ACh release.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of phorbol esters and so the involvement of Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C;PKC) in the release of acetylcholine (ACh) was studied using Torpedo electric organ synaptosomes. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA), a known activator of PKC, induced neurotransmitter release in a concentration-dependent manner and increased the potassium-evoked release of ACh. The effect of TPA was shown to be independent of the extrasynaptosomal calcium concentration. TPA-induced ACh release was reversed by H-7, an inhibitor of PKC activity. This drug showed no effect on potassium-evoked ACh release. Botulinum toxin, a strong blocker of potassium-induced ACh release in that synaptosomal preparation, showed no inhibitory effect on the TPA-induced ACh release. Our results suggest that activation of PKC potentiates the release of an ACh pool that is not releasable by potassium depolarization, independently of the extracellular calcium concentration.  相似文献   

14.
It was discovered that illumination of the complex formed by the solubilized acetylcholine receptor from Torpedo marmorata and Lys25-p-azidobenzoyl derivative of neurotoxin II results in the appearance on the receptor of up to 4 additional binding sites. Acetylcholine and neurotoxin II, but not the long-chain neurotoxins bind specifically to these sites. The additional binding sites could be also detected after illuminating the receptor complex with other photoactivable derivatives, provided the latter were displaced from one of the two main binding sites by hexa(trifluoroacetyl)neurotoxin II. A similar, but less pronounced effect, was observed on binding Lys25 (Ac) derivative of neurotoxin II. The formation of the additional binding sites was found to depend on the activity of the receptor preparations as well as on the mutual influence of the two main toxin-binding sites.  相似文献   

15.
The nature of the intraterminal compartments from which acetylcholine (ACh) is released following presynaptic stimulation was investigated. This was pursued by examining the effects of the anticholinergic drug 2-(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (AH5183) on the release of newly synthesized [3H]ACh and of endogenous ACh from purified cholinergic nerve terminals (synaptosomes) which were isolated from the electric organs of Torpedo. Preincubation of the synaptosomes, with AH5183 (1-10 microM), does not affect either the intraterminal synthesis of [3H]ACh or the uptake of its precursors, but results in a marked inhibition (85%) of the release of the newly synthesized [3H]ACh. However, when AH5183 is added following the accumulation of [3H]ACh in the nerve terminals, it does not affect [3H]ACh release. AH5183 also has no effect on the release of preformed endogenous ACh. These findings, together with the previous in vitro demonstrations that AH5183 is a potent inhibitor of ACh uptake into isolated cholinergic vesicles, suggest that most of the synaptosomal ACh is secreted by a vesicular mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
The present experiments show that N-[3H]-methylcarbamylcholine ([3H]MCC) binds specifically and with high affinity to rat hippocampus, frontal cortex, and striatum. The highest maximal density of binding sites was apparent in frontal cortex and the lowest in hippocampus. [3H]MCC binding was potently inhibited by nicotinic, but not muscarinic, agonists and by the nicotinic antagonist dihydro-beta-erythroidine in all three brain regions studied. The effect of unlabeled MCC on acetylcholine (ACh) release from slices of rat brain was tested. The drug significantly enhanced spontaneous ACh release from slices of hippocampus and frontal cortex, but not from striatal slices. This effect of MCC to increase ACh release from rat hippocampus and frontal cortex was antagonized by the nicotinic antagonists dihydro-beta-erythroidine and d-tubocurarine, but not by alpha-bungarotoxin or by the muscarinic antagonist atropine. The MCC-induced increase in spontaneous ACh release from hippocampal and frontal cortical slices was not affected by tetrodotoxin. The results suggest that MCC might alter cholinergic transmission in rat brain by a direct activation of presynaptic nicotinic receptors on the cholinergic terminals. That this alteration of ACh release is apparent in hippocampus and frontal cortex, but not in striatum, suggests that there may be a regional specificity in the regulation of ACh by nicotinic receptors in rat brain.  相似文献   

17.
In this study, we investigated the mechanisms underlying the release of preformed and of newly synthesized acetylcholine (ACh) from isolated Torpedo nerve terminals (synaptosomes). This was pursued by examining and comparing the effects of anticytoskeletal and anticalmodulin drugs and of activating the presynaptic muscarinic ACh receptors on the release of preformed endogenous ACh and of newly synthesized radiolabeled ACh. The anticytoskeletal drugs vinblastine, cytochalasin B, and colchicine inhibit the Ca2+-dependent K+-mediated release of newly synthesized radiolabeled ACh, but have no effect on the release of preformed ACh. By contrast, the muscarinic agonist oxotremorine markedly inhibits the release of preformed ACh, but has little effect on the release of newly formed ACh. Treatment of the synaptosomes with the calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine inhibits the release of both ACh pools concomitantly. These findings show that preformed and newly synthesized ACh are released by different routes and suggest that their secretion is mediated by converging pathways. The significance of these results in view of the previously demonstrated preferential release of newly synthesized ACh is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Interactions of the synthetic pyrethroid allethrin with the nicotinic acetylcholine (ACh) receptor/channel were studied in membranes from Torpedo electric organ. Allethrin did not inhibit binding of [3H]ACh to the receptor sites, but inhibited noncompetitively binding of [3H]perhydrohistrionicotoxin ([3H]H12-HTX) to the ionic channel sites in a dose-dependent manner. The inhibition constant (Ki) of [3H]H12-HTX binding in absence of receptor agonist was 30 micro M, while in presence of 100 micro M carbamylcholine it was 4 micro M. This inhibitory effect of allethrin had a negative temperature coefficient. The high affinity binding of allethrin to the channel sites of the nicotinic ACh-receptor may be indicative of a postsynaptic site of action for pyrethroids, in addition to their known action on the sodium channel.  相似文献   

19.
Several methods were used to analyze for tryptophan in the acetylcholine (ACh) receptors purified from the electric organs of the electric rays, Torpedo californica and Torpedo marmorata. The best value of tryptophan was 2.4 mol %. When excited at 290 nm, both receptors fluoresced with a maximum at 336, but there was no change in the fluorescence emission spectra upon binding of carbamylcholine, d-tubocurarine, ACh, or decamethonium. The free SH content of the Torpedo receptors varied in different preparations, and was highest in that purified from fresh T. californica using deaerated solutions and dialysis under nitrogen, and lowest in that prepared from the aged lyophilized membranes of T. marmorata. The maximum free SH content was 20 nmol/mg of protein or 0.22 mol %, equal to at most 18% of the total cysteic acid residues. Reaction of either 33% or of all the SH residues with p-chloromercuribenzoate reduced maximum ACh binding to the pure receptor prepared from fresh T. californica by only 23%.  相似文献   

20.
A fusion protein consisting of the TrpE protein and residues 166-211 of the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor alpha 1 subunit was produced in Escherichia coli using a pATH10 expression vector. Residues in the Torpedo sequence were changed by means of oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis to residues present in snake alpha 1 subunit and rat nerve alpha 3 subunit which do not bind alpha-bungarotoxin. The fusion protein of the Torpedo sequence bound 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin with high affinity (IC50 = 2.5 x 10(-8) M from competition with unlabeled toxin, KD = 2.3 x 10(-8) M from equilibrium saturation binding data). Mutation of three Torpedo residues to snake residues, W184F, K185W, and W187S, had no effect on binding. Conversion of two additional Torpedo residues to snake, T191S and P194L, reduced alpha-bungarotoxin binding to undetectable levels. The P194L mutation alone abolished toxin binding. Mutation of three Torpedo alpha 1 residues to neuronal alpha 3-subunit residues, W187E, Y189K, and T191N, also abolished detectable alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Conversion of Try-189 to Asn which is present in the snake sequence (Y189N) abolished toxin binding. It is concluded that in the sequence of the alpha subunit of Torpedo encompassing Cys-192 and Cys-193, Try-189 and Pro-194 are important determinants of alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Tyr-189 may interact directly with cationic groups or participate in aromatic-aromatic interactions while Pro-194 may be necessary to maintain a conformation conductive to neurotoxin binding.  相似文献   

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