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1.
This study focuses on the effects of K+ depolarization on neurite elongation of identified Helisoma neurons isolated into culture. Application of K+ to the external medium caused a dose-dependent suppression of neurite elongation. Lower concentrations of K+ were associated with a slowing in the rate of neurite elongation, whereas higher concentrations produced neurite retraction. Surprisingly, the effects of K+ depolarization were transient, and neurite elongation rates recovered towards control levels within 90 min even though the neurons remained in high-K+ solution. Identified neurons differed in the magnitude of their response to K+ depolarization; neurite elongation of buccal neuron B4 was inhibited at 5 mM K+, but elongation in B5 and B19 was not affected until concentrations of 25 mM. Electrophysiologically, K+ application evoked a brief period (5–10 s) of action potential activity that was followed by a steady-state membrane depolarization lasting 2 h or more. The changes in neurite elongation induced by K+ depolarization occurred in isolated growth cones severed from their neurites and were blocked by application of calcium antagonists. Intracellular free Ca2+ levels in growth cones of B4 and B19 increased and then decreased during the 90-min depolarization, corresponding to the changes in elongation. B4 and B19 showed differences in the magnitude, time course, and spatial distribution of the Ca2+ change during depolarization, reflecting their different sensitivities to depolarization.  相似文献   

2.
Interactive effects of serotonin and acetylcholine on neurite elongation   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Serotonin (5-HT) inhibits elongation of neurites of specific identified neurons. Here we report a novel, growth-enabling action of another neurotransmitter, acetylcholine (ACh). When applied simultaneously with serotonin, ACh prevents the inhibition of Helisoma neuron B19 neurite elongation that would occur in response to application of 5-HT alone. We also report that ACh prevents the rise in growth cone Ca2+ that would occur in response to application of 5-HT alone and that ACh blocks the electrical excitatory effect of 5-HT on neuron B19. These results support the hypothesis that growth cone motility and neurite elongation can be regulated by voltage-gated Ca2+ fluxes and suggest that the dynamics of neurite morphology may be complexly regulated by an array of neurotransmitters, as is functional electrical activity.  相似文献   

3.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,127(5):1461-1475
The signaling mechanisms underlying neurite growth induced by cadherins and integrins are incompletely understood. In our experiments, we have examined these mechanisms using purified N-cadherin and laminin (LN). We find that unlike the neurite growth induced by fibroblastic cells expressing transfected N-cadherin (Doherty, P., and F.S. Walsh. 1992. Curr. Opin. Neurobiol. 2:595-601), growth induced by purified N- cadherin in chick ciliary ganglion (CG), sensory, or forebrain neurons is not sensitive to inhibition by pertussis toxin. Using fura-2 imaging of single cells, we show that soluble N-cadherin induces Ca2+ increases in CG neuron cell bodies, and, importantly, in growth cones. In contrast, N-cadherin can induce Ca2+ decreases in glial cells. N- cadherin-induced neuronal Ca2+ responses are sensitive to Ni2+, but are relatively insensitive to diltiazem and omega-conotoxin. Similarly, neurite growth induced by purified N-cadherin is inhibited by Ni2+, but is unaffected by diltiazem and conotoxin. Soluble LN also induced small Ca2+ responses in CG neurons. LN-induced neurite growth, like that induced by N-cadherin, is insensitive to diltiazem and conotoxin, but is highly sensitive to Ni2+ inhibition. K+ depolarization experiments suggest that voltage-dependent Ca2+ influx pathways in CG neurons (cell bodies and growth cones) are largely blocked by the combination of diltiazem and Ni2+. Our results demonstrate that cadherin signaling involves cell type-specific Ca2+ changes in responding cells, and in particular, that N-cadherin can cause Ca2+ increases in neuronal growth cones. Our findings are consistent with the current idea that distinct neuronal transduction pathways exist for cell adhesion molecules compared with integrins, but suggest that the involvement of Ca2+ signals in both of these pathways is more complex than previously appreciated.  相似文献   

4.
In larval lamprey, descending brain neurons, which regenerate their axons following spinal cord injury, were isolated and examined in cell culture to identify some of the factors that regulate neurite outgrowth. Focal application of 5 mM or 25 mM L-glutamate to single growth cones inhibited outgrowth of the treated neurite, but other neurites from the same neuron were not inhibited, an effect that has not been well studied for neurons in other systems. Glutamate-induced inhibition of neurite outgrowth was abolished by 10 mM kynurenic acid. Application of high potassium media to growth cones inhibited neurite outgrowth, an effect that was blocked by 2 mM cobalt or 100 microM cadmium, suggesting that calcium influx via voltage-gated channels contributes to glutamate-induced regulation of neurite outgrowth. Application of glutamate to growth cones in the presence of 2 microM omega-conotoxin MVIIC (CTX) still inhibited neurite outgrowth, while CTX blocked high potassium-induced inhibition of neurite outgrowth. Thus, CTX blocked virtually all of the calcium influx resulting from depolarization. To our knowledge, this is the first direct demonstration that calcium influx via ligand-gated ion channels can contribute to regulation of neurite outgrowth. Finally, focal application of glutamate to the cell bodies of descending brain neurons inhibited outgrowth of multiple neurites from the same neuron, and this is the first demonstration that multiple neurites can be regulated in this fashion. Signaling mechanisms involving intracellular calcium, similar to those shown here, may be important for regulating axonal regeneration following spinal cord injury in the lamprey.  相似文献   

5.
Identified neurons of the buccal ganglion of the snail Helisoma when isolated from their ganglionic environment and plated in cell culture grow new neurites that are tipped with motile growth cones. Addition of the neurotransmitter serotonin to the culture medium surrounding actively growing neurons causes an immediate, premature cessation of neurite elongation in specific identified neurons. Serotonin selectively inhibits neurite extension of neurons B19 and P5 while having no effect on the extension of neuron B5. Coincident with the serotonin evoked inhibition of neurite elongation is an inhibition of growth cone motile activities and a retraction of growth cone filopodia and lamellipodia. One site of serotonin's growth inhibitory actions is directly at the growth cone rather than at the neurites or cell body. A second area of this study concerns connectivity. In Helisoma neurons the formation of electrical synaptic connections critically relies on both potential partner neurons having a mutual interaction of actively growing neurites. Neurons in a nongrowing state do not form electrical synapses (Hadley et al., 1983). As a result of inhibiting neurite extension, serotonin is able to affect synaptogenesis by preventing certain neurons (neurons B19) from forming electrical synaptic connections with other neurons (neurons B5) that are themselves competent to interconnect. Thus, by inhibiting neurite extension, serotonin is capable of regulating both the development of arborizations and the formation of connectivity.  相似文献   

6.
A method for clamping cytosolic free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) in cultures of rat sympathetic neurons at or below resting levels for several days was devised to determine whether Ca2+ signals are required for neurite outgrowth from neurons that depend on Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) for their growth and survival. To control [Ca2+]i, normal Ca2+ influx was eliminated by titration of extracellular Ca2+ with EGTA and reinstated through voltage-sensitive Ca2+ channels. The rate of neurite outgrowth and the number of neurites thus became dependent on the extent of depolarization by KCl, and withdrawal of KCl caused an immediate cessation of growth. Neurite outgrowth was completely blocked by the L type Ca2+ channel antagonists nifedipine, nitrendipine, D600, or diltiazem at sub- or micromolar concentrations. Measurement of [Ca2+]i in cell bodies using the fluorescent Ca2+ indicator fura-2 established that optimal growth, similar to that seen in normal medium, was obtained when [Ca2+]i was clamped at resting levels. These levels of [Ca2+]i were set by serum, which elevated [Ca2+]i by integral of 30 nM, whereas the addition of NGF had no effect on [Ca2+]i. The reduction of [Ca2+]o prevented neurite fasciculation but this had no effect on the rate of neurite elongation or on the number of extending neurites. These results show that neurite outgrowth from NGF-dependent neurons occurs over long periods in the complete absence of Ca2+ signals, suggesting that Ca2+ signals are not necessary for operating the basic machinery of neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of extracellular Na+, K+ and Cl- on neurite outgrowth of PC12 pheochromocytoma cells were studied. Nerve growth factor (NGF)-induced neurite formation was inhibited upon substitution of choline chloride for NaCl under normal culture conditions. It was found that neurite formation increased proportionately with the concentration of Na+ in medium up to 150 mM. When PC12 cells were exposed to NGF in suspension culture followed by transfer to new dishes, they showed neurite extention in response to NGF in an RNA- and protein synthesis-independent manner. Under these conditions, neurite outgrowth occurred normally in 60-150 mM Na+, whereas it decreased significantly at lower concentrations of Na+. Na+ dependency was also observed for cyclic AMP-mediated neurite formation of PC12 cells. In contrast neurite outgrowth was independent of K+ in the range 5-106 mM, suggesting that membrane potential did not play a role in this process. No alterations were observed in neurite outgrowth with Cl- replaced by NO3-, SO2-4, or 2-hydroxyethanesulfonate. Thus, extracellular Na+ plays a role in controlling neurite formation of these cells. An attempt was made to relate this effect to a decrease in cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration monitored by a fluorescent dye sensitive to Ca2+.  相似文献   

8.
Ca influx has been studied in squid axons under internal dialysis control. In axons dialyzed with "normal" physiological conditions (Nai = 40-50 mM, Cai2+ = 0.06-0.1 microM, ATP = 2 mM, Ki = 310 mM), 70% of the resting Ca influx is sensitive to external TTX (K0.5 congruent to 5 nM), 20% of it can be accounted by the reversal of the Na-Ca exchange, and the remaining fraction (10%) is insensitive to TTX, D-600, and Nai. The Ca antagonic drug D-600 (50-100 microM) has an inhibitory effect on the resting Ca influx. This compound was found to affect both the TTX sensitive and the Nai-dependent Ca influx components. In the presence of Nai and ATP, Cai2+ activates the carrier mediated Ca entry (Nai-dependent Ca influx). Most of the activation occurs in the submicromolar range of Cai2+ concentrations (K0.5 congruent to 0.6 microM). In the absence of Nai and/or ATP, no activation of Ca influx by Cai2+ was found up to about 5 microM Cai2+. Prolonged depolarization with high Ko causes an increase in Ca influx sustained for long time (minutes). Depolarizing the axons by removing Ki causes the same effect. This depolarization-induced Ca entry was only observed in axons containing Nai. In the absence of Nai, Ca influx decreases with increasing Ko. The activation of the carrier mediated Ca entry (electrogenic Na/Ca exchange) by membrane depolarization was found to be markedly dependent on the magnitude of Ca2+ i. Increasing the magnitude of Ca2+ i from 0.1 to 0.6 microM causes a ten fold increase in the extra Ca influx induced by a K-depolarization.  相似文献   

9.
We analyze the time course of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin) release from K+-depolarized hippocampal slices using a two-compartment kinetic model. The model is based on the assumptions that the rate of release is dependent on the amount of 5-HT in a releasable pool and that this pool may be resupplied during depolarization by newly synthesized 5-HT. Comparisons were made between predictions of the model and observed changes in 5-HT metabolism and in 5-HT release studied under a variety of experimental conditions. In accordance with predictions of the model, experimental manipulation of 5-HT synthesis and breakdown rates did not affect release immediately after depolarization but did affect the release rate during prolonged depolarization. Increasing bath tryptophan from 0 to 10 microM approximately doubled both 5-HT synthesis and the release rate after 40 min of K+-induced depolarization while having a smaller effect on release during the first 2 min. Inhibition of 5-HT breakdown did not significantly affect release during the first 2 min of depolarization but increased it over threefold after 40 min. In contrast, altering the concentrations of K+ or Ca2+ in the incubation medium affected mainly the early phase of 5-HT release and not the late phase. Reducing Ca2+ from 2.4 to 0.4 mM reduced 5-HT release by about 30% during the first 9 min of depolarization but did not affect release during the subsequent 30 min. Increasing the concentration of K+ from 18 to 60 mM stimulated release by sixfold during the first 2 min but only twofold after a subsequent 30 min. These results support our kinetic model and suggest that regulation of 5-HT metabolism at the site of the nerve terminal could be a mechanism for modulation of 5-HT release during prolonged discharge of serotonergic neurons.  相似文献   

10.
The coupling between depolarization-induced calcium entry and neurotransmitter release was studied in rat brain neurons in culture. The endogenous dopamine content of the cells was determined by high performance liquid chromatography utilizing electrochemical detection. The amount of dopamine in unstimulated cells was found to be about 16 ng/mg of protein. Depolarization of the neurons by elevated K+ caused a Ca2+-dependent release of dopamine from the cells. Following 1 min of depolarization, the cellular dopamine content and the amount of [3H]dopamine in cells preloaded with the radioactive transmitter were reduced by 35%. The release of [3H]dopamine by the neurons was measured at 1.5-6-s intervals by a novel rapid dipping technique. Depolarization in the presence of Ca2+ (1.8 mM) enhanced the rate of neurotransmitter release by 90-fold (0.072 +/- 0.003 s-1) over the basal release in the presence of Ca2+. The evoked release consisted of a major rapidly terminating phase (t1/2 = 9.6 s) which comprised about 40% of the neurotransmitter content of the cells and a subsequent slower efflux (t1/2 = 575 s) which was observed during following prolonged depolarization. Predepolarization of the cells in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ did not affect the kinetics of the evoked release. The fast evoked release could be re-elicited in the cells after 20 min "rest" in reference low K+ buffer. The effects of varying the extracellular Ca2+ concentrations on the kinetic parameters of the evoked release were measured. The amount of neurotransmitter released during the fast kinetic phase was very sensitive to the external Ca2+ (from 0% in the absence of Ca2+ to 40% of the neurotransmitter content at Ca2+ 0.3 mM). The rate constant of the fast release did not depend on the extracellular Ca2+, whereas the rate constant of the slow release increased from 0.0004 +/- 0.0001 s-1 at 0.4 mM Ca2+ to 0.0012 +/- 0.0002 s-1 at 0.8 mM Ca2+. The fast evoked release was inhibited by verapamil in a concentration-dependent manner. By contrast, verapamil enhanced the basal and the slow release independent of the presence of Ca2+. Both fast and slow phases of the evoked release were blocked by Co2+. Addition of Co2+ within the first 6 s after the onset of depolarization inhibited the fast release but failed to do so when added later on.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Histamine, released from mast cells, can modulate the activity of intrinsic neurons in the guinea pig cardiac plexus. The present study examined the ionic mechanisms underlying the histamine-induced responses in these cells. Histamine evokes a small membrane depolarization and an increase in neuronal excitability. Using intracellular voltage recording from individual intracardiac neurons, we were able to demonstrate that removal of extracellular sodium reduced the membrane depolarization, whereas inhibition of K+ channels by 1 mM Ba2+, 2 mM Cs+, or 5 mM tetraethylammonium had no effect. The depolarization was also not inhibited by either 10 microM Gd3+ or a reduced Cl- solution. The histamine-induced increase in excitability was unaffected by K+ channel inhibitors; however, it was reduced by either blockage of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels with 200 microM Cd2+ or replacement of extracellular Ca2+ with Mg2+. Conversely, alterations in intracellular calcium with thapsigargin or caffeine did not inhibit the histamine-induced effects. However, in cells treated with both thapsigargin and caffeine to deplete internal calcium stores, the histamine-induced increase in excitability was decreased. Treatment with the phospholipase C inhibitor U73122 also prevented both the depolarization and the increase in excitability. From these data, we conclude that histamine, via activation of H1 receptors, activates phospholipase C, which results in 1) the opening of a nonspecific cation channel, such as a transient receptor potential channel 4 or 5; and 2) in combination with either the influx of Ca2+ through voltage-gated channels or the release of internal calcium stores leads to an increase in excitability.  相似文献   

12.
1. The quantities of serotonin that are released from isolated leech ganglia in vitro were measured with the sensitive neurochemical techniques of HPLC-EC. 2. Segmental ganglia were exposed to elevated concentrations of potassium that depolarize leech serotonin-containing neurons by approximately 35 mV per decade. 3. Each segmental ganglion released on average 0.20 pmol of serotonin during 10 min of incubation in a solution containing 64 mM K+. 4. The rate of serotonin release increased nearly four-fold to 0.74 pmol/10 min when ganglia were incubated in 120 mM K+. 5. The rates of ganglionic serotonin release in 120 mM K+ were quantitatively similar in these three, experimentally important species of leeches: Hirudo medicinalis, Macrobdella decora and Haementeria ghilianii. 6. Ionic substitution experiments with the divalent cations Mg2+ and Co2+ indicated that the release of serotonin from leech ganglia is mediated by a Ca2+ dependent process. 7. The serotonin-uptake blockers, imipramine and chlorimipramine, did not increase the amount of serotonin released in elevated potassium. 8. Vitally staining the identified serotonin-containing neurons with Neutral Red dye did not reduce the quantity of serotonin that was released from the ganglia in elevated potassium. 9. This study demonstrates the capacity of leech ganglia to release the neurochemical serotonin, and the rates of transmitter release increase with the degree of depolarization of serotonin-containing neurons.  相似文献   

13.
1. The role of Ca2+ in L-glutamate-induced depolarization was investigated in the isolated frog spinal cord. 2. The size of a depolarization induced by L-glutamate (3 mM) was inversely related to the extracellular Ca2+ concentration, but was reduced in a Ca2+-free medium containing EGTA (0.3 mM). 3. L-Glutamate caused a marked depolarization in both ventral and dorsal roots, even in a NaCl-deficient medium (Ca2+, 2.0 mM). The size of the depolarization was attenuated by a prolonged or repeated application of L-glutamate. Ca2+ can be replaced by Sr2+ or Mg2+. 4. Concanavalin A (1 microM) prevents the development of desensitization to L-glutamate. 5. Present results suggest that Ca2+ plays the role of a charge carrier for L-glutamate-induced depolarization and of a regulator of modulator for L-glutamate-receptor sensitivity. The roles are exaggerated in NaCl-free medium.  相似文献   

14.
Action potential-driven current transients were recorded from sensory cilia and used to monitor the spike frequency generated by olfactory receptor neurons, which were maintained in their natural position in the sensory epithelium. Both basal and messenger-induced activities, as elicited with forskolin or cyclic nucleotides, were dependent on the presence of mucosal Na+. The spike rate decreased to approximately 20% when mucosal Na+ was lowered from 120 to 60 mM (replaced by N-methyl-D-glucamine+), without clear changes in amplitude and duration of the recorded action potential-driven transients. Mucosal Ca2+ and Mg2+ blocked spike discharge completely when increased from 1 to 10 mM in Ringer solution. Lowering mucosal Ca2+ below 1 mM increased the spike rate. These results can be explained by the presence of a cyclic nucleotide-dependent, Ca(2+)-sensitive cation conductance, which allows a depolarizing Na+ inward current to flow through the apical membrane of in situ receptor cells. A conductance with these properties, thought to provide the receptor current, was first described for isolated olfactory cells by Nakamura and Gold (1987. Nature (Lond.). 325:442-444). The forskolin-stimulated spike rate decreased when l-cis-diltiazem, a known blocker of the cyclic nucleotide-dependent receptor current, was added to the mucosal solution. Spike rate also decreased when the mucosal K+ concentration was lowered. Mucosal Ba2+ and 4-aminopyridine, presumably by means of cell depolarization, rapidly increased the spike rate. This suggests the presence of apical K+ channels that render the receptor cells sensitive to the K+ concentration of the olfactory mucus. With a slower time course, mucosal Ba2+ and 4-aminopyridine decreased the amplitude and caused rectification of the fast current transients (prolongation of action potentials). Abolishment of the apical Na+ current (by removal of mucosal Na+), as indicated by a strong decrease in spike rate, could be counteracted by adding 10 mM Ba2+ or 1 mM 4-aminopyridine to the mucosal solution, which re-established spiking. Similarly, blockage of the apical cation conductance with 10 mM Ca could be counteracted by adding 10 mM Ba2+ or by raising the mucosal K+ concentration. Thus mucosal concentrations of Na+, K+, and Ca2+ will jointly affect the sensitivity of odor detection.  相似文献   

15.
Smooth muscle cells were isolated from estrogenized rat myometrium by collagenase digestion. Electron microscopic examination and measurement of cell lengths by image-splitting micrometry were carried out after fixation with acrolein. Mean lengths of cells before and after isolation were 81.7 and 66.9 micron, respectively. Responses of cells were compared with contractions of isolated strips recorded isometrically. Effects of carbachol and KCl were examined in 2 mM Ca, 2 mM Ca + 4 mM EGTA, and 2 mM Ca + 10(-8) M nitrendipine solution. Carbachol and KCl produced concentration-dependent shortening of isolated cells maximal at 30 s after addition. The concentrations of carbachol required to produce shortenings were about 100-fold less than those required to produce isometric contractions; but no major difference was observed in the concentration dependence of cell shortening and isometric contraction produced by potassium-induced depolarization. In 2 mM Ca solution, there was a phasic response, followed by a tonic response such that more than 50% of maximum cell shortening was maintained for 10 min. However, in 2 mM Ca + 4 mM EGTA or 10(-8) M nitrendipine, the tonic contraction was abolished and cells rapidly relaxed after 30 s. If carbachol was added to cells after varying times in the EGTA-containing solution, the ability to initiate a contraction declined exponentially with a half-time of 160 s. Effects of depolarization by KCl were examined in 2 mM Ca plus nitrendipine and 2 mM Ca + 4 mM EGTA solution. Shortening occurred in 2 mM Ca solution by depolarization but not if nitrendipine was added. Though shortening was not observed in 2 mM Ca + 4 mM EGTA solution by KCl, subsequent addition of carbachol induced shortening. These results suggested that there was an intracellular Ca store site from which Ca was released by carbachol and which was not affected by depolarization in the absence of external Ca. No evidence was obtained that the contraction persists in Ca2+-free medium in isolated cells, which is in agreement with previous findings in small muscle strips in which only a similar transient response was obtained.  相似文献   

16.
The cytosolic Ca2+ activity of insulin-releasing clonal cells (RINm5F) was studied with the intracellular fluorescent indicator quin-2. When the extracellular Ca2+ concentration was 1 mM, the basal cytosolic Ca2+ activity was 101 +/- 5 nM. Depolarization with 25 mM K+ increased this Ca2+ activity to at least 318 nM, an effect completely reversed by the voltage-dependent channel blocker D-600. In the presence of K+ alone these channels appeared to have a half-life of 6.7 +/- 0.8 min. In contrast to the action of K+, exposure of the RINm5F cells to 4 mM glucose resulted in a reduction of the cytosolic Ca2+ activity. This effect was observed during K+ depolarization but was more pronounced under basal conditions when it amounted to 20%. The data provide the first direct evidence that glucose can decrease the cytosolic Ca2+ activity in beta-cells. Unlike the case in normal beta-cells the glucose effect on the voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels in the RINm5F cells is apparently not sufficient to overcome the intracellular buffering of Ca2+. A defective depolarization is therefore a probable cause of the failing insulin secretion of RINm5F cells exposed to glucose.  相似文献   

17.
Potassium channel block by internal calcium and strontium   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
We show that intracellular Ca blocks current flow through open K channels in squid giant fiber lobe neurons. The block has similarities to internal Sr block of K channels in squid axons, which we have reexamined. Both ions must cross a high energy barrier to enter the blocking site from the inside, and block occurs only with millimolar concentrations and with strong depolarization. With Sr (axon) or Ca (neuron) inside, IK is normal in time course for voltages less than about +50 mV; but for large steps, above +90 mV, there is a rapid time-dependent block or "inactivation." From roughly +70 to +90 mV (depending on concentration) the current has a complex time course that may be related to K accumulation near the membrane's outer surface. Block can be deepened by either increasing the concentration or the voltage. Electrical distance measurements suggest that the blocking ion moves to a site deep in the channel, possibly near the outer end. Block by internal Ca can be prevented by putting 10 mM Rb in the external solution. Recovery from block after a strong depolarization occurs quickly at +30 mV, with a time course that is about the same as that of normal K channel activation at this voltage. 20 mM Mg in neurons had no discernible blocking effect. The experiments raise questions regarding the relation of block to normal channel gating. It is speculated that when the channel is normally closed, the "blocking" site is occupied by a Ca ion that comes from the external medium.  相似文献   

18.
In addition to acting as a classical neurotransmitter in synaptic transmission, acetylcholine (ACh) has been shown to play a role in axonal growth and growth cone guidance. What is not well understood is how ACh acts on growth cones to affect growth cone filopodia, structures known to be important for neuronal pathfinding. We addressed this question using an identified neuron (B5) from the buccal ganglion of the pond snail Helisoma trivolvis in cell culture. ACh treatment caused pronounced filopodial elongation within minutes, an effect that required calcium influx and resulted in the elevation of the intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca]i). Whole‐cell patch clamp recordings showed that ACh caused a reduction in input resistance, a depolarization of the membrane potential, and an increase in firing frequency in B5 neurons. These effects were mediated via the activation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), as the nAChR agonist dimethylphenylpiperazinium (DMPP) mimicked the effects of ACh on filopodial elongation, [Ca]i elevation, and changes in electrical activity. Moreover, the nAChR antagonist tubucurarine blocked all DMPP‐induced effects. Lastly, ACh acted locally at the growth cone, because growth cones that were physically isolated from their parent neuron responded to ACh by filopodial elongation with a similar time course as growth cones that remained connected to their parent neuron. Our data revealed a critical role for ACh as a modulator of growth cone filopodial dynamics. ACh signaling was mediated via nAChRs and resulted in Ca influx, which, in turn, caused filopodial elongation. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 73: 487–501, 2013  相似文献   

19.
Neurite extension and branching are affected by activity-dependent modulation of intracellular Ca2+, such that an optimal window of [Ca2+] is required for outgrowth. Our understanding of the molecular mechanisms regulating this optimal [Ca2+]i remains unclear. Taking advantage of the large growth cone size of cultured primary neurons from pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis combined with dsRNA knockdown, we show that neuronal calcium sensor-1 (NCS-1) regulates neurite extension and branching, and activity-dependent Ca2+ signals in growth cones. An NCS-1 C-terminal peptide enhances only neurite branching and moderately reduces the Ca2+ signal in growth cones compared with dsRNA knockdown. Our findings suggest that at least two separate structural domains in NCS-1 independently regulate Ca2+ influx and neurite outgrowth, with the C-terminus specifically affecting branching. We describe a model in which NCS-1 regulates cytosolic Ca2+ around the optimal window level to differentially control neurite extension and branching.  相似文献   

20.
Nitric oxide has been proposed to play an important role in neuronal development. We have previously shown that growth cones from an identified neuron, B5, in the snail Helisoma trivolvis, respond to nitric oxide (NO) donors by increasing the length of their filopodia within minutes of application (Van Wagenen and Rehder, 1999). This effect was mediated through a cGMP-induced increase in [Ca2+]i and resulted in an enlargement of the growth cone's action radius, suggesting that NO could function as a signaling molecule during neuronal pathfinding. We show here that NO functions as a specific rather than a general regulator of growth cone filopodia, because another identified neuron from the same ganglion, B19, failed to respond to NO with an increase in filopodial length. We found that, contrary to B5 neurons, B19 growth cones contained little or no soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) immunoreactivity, presumably preventing their response to NO. This hypothesis was supported by the finding that the sGC activator YC-1 (10 microM) had no effect on B19 filopodia but induced elongation of B5 filopodia. These results indicate that the effects of NO can be quite specific, and raise the interesting possibility that neurons could selectively tune in to NO by differentially expressing the target enzyme sGC in the appropriate cellular location during critical developmental stages. In addition, our NADPH-diaphorase staining and anti-NOS immunohistochemisty suggest that growth cones of B5 neurons, but not of B19 neurons, could be a source of NO, making NO a potential intra- and transcellular messenger.  相似文献   

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