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1.
Dystroglycan is a member of the transmembrane dystrophin glycoprotein complex in muscle that binds to the synapse-organizing molecule agrin. Dystroglycan binding and AChR aggregation are mediated by two separate domains of agrin. To test whether dystroglycan plays a role in receptor aggregation at the neuromuscular junction, we overexpressed it by injecting rabbit dystroglycan RNA into one- or two-celled Xenopus embryos. We measured AChR aggregation in myotomes by labeling them with rhodamine-alpha-bungarotoxin followed by confocal microscopy and image analysis. Dystroglycan overexpression decreased AChR aggregation at the neuromuscular junction. This result is consistent with dystroglycan competition for agrin without signaling AChR aggregation. It also supports the hypothesis that dystroglycan is not the myotube-associated specificity component, (MASC) a putative coreceptor needed for agrin to activate muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) and signal AChR aggregation. Dystroglycan was distributed along the surface of muscle membranes, but was concentrated at the ends of myotomes, where AChRs normally aggregate at synapses. Overexpressed dystroglycan altered AChR aggregation in a rostral-caudal gradient, consistent with the sequential development of neuromuscular synapses along the embryo. Increasing concentrations of dystroglycan RNA did not further decrease AChR aggregation, but decreased embryo survival. Development often stopped during gastrulation, suggesting an essential, nonsynaptic role of dystroglycan during this early period of development.  相似文献   

2.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(6):1781-1785
The distribution and turnover rate of acetylcholine receptors labeled with 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin were examined in innervated mouse sternomastoid muscle by electron microscope autoradiography using the "mask" analysis procedure. We compared the total population of receptors with receptors newly inserted at the junction 2 d after inactivation with nonradioactive alpha-bungarotoxin, both at the top (thickened) region of the postjunctional folds (pjm) and the nonthickened bottom folds. We found that the receptor site density was approximately 10 times greater on the thickened pjm than on the nonthickened bottom folds for both total and newly inserted receptors. This ratio does not change significantly during a 6-d period after labeling the new receptors. Furthermore, calculated values for turnover time of receptors show that both total and newly inserted receptors at both regions of the junctional folds have half-lives for degradation within the range given in the literature for slow junctional receptors. These data exclude a simple migration model whereby receptors are preferentially inserted in the nonthickened region of the junctional folds and then migrate into the thickened membrane at a rate equal to the turnover rate of the receptors.  相似文献   

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Background

The turnover of acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junction is regulated in an activity-dependent manner. Upon denervation and under various other pathological conditions, receptor half-life is decreased.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We demonstrate a novel approach to follow the kinetics of acetylcholine receptor lifetimes upon pulse labeling of mouse muscles with 125I-α-bungarotoxin in vivo. In contrast to previous assays where residual activity was measured ex vivo, in our setup the same animals are used throughout the whole measurement period, thereby permitting a dramatic reduction of animal numbers at increased data quality. We identified three stability levels of acetylcholine receptors depending on the presence or absence of innervation: one pool of receptors with a long half-life of ∼13 days, a second with an intermediate half-life of ∼8 days, and a third with a short half-life of ∼1 day. Data were highly reproducible from animal to animal and followed simple exponential terms. The principal outcomes of these measurements were reproduced by an optical pulse-labeling assay introduced recently.

Conclusions/Significance

A novel assay to determine kinetics of acetylcholine receptor turnover with small animal numbers is presented. Our data show that nerve activity acts on muscle acetylcholine receptor stability by at least two different means, one shifting receptor lifetime from short to intermediate and another, which further increases receptor stability to a long lifetime. We hypothesize on possible molecular mechanisms.  相似文献   

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At the adult neuromuscular junction, acetylcholine (ACh) receptors are highly localized at the subsynaptic membrane, whereas, embryonic myotubes before innervation have receptors distributed over the entire surface. Thus sometime during development, ACh receptors accumulate to the nerve contact area. This nerve-induced receptor accumulation can be reproduced in Xenopus nerve-muscle cultures, which provides us with a unique opportunity to investigate the underlying molecular mechanism of this event. Anderson and Cohen (1977) have shown that nerve-induced receptor accumulation is, at least partly, due to migration of pre-existing receptors. It is, thus, plausible that freely diffusing receptors in the membrane are trapped at the nerve-contact region and form clusters. We tested this diffusion trap model. First, receptors in the background region are indeed predominantly mobile and those in the cluster are immobile. Second, the diffusion of receptors in the membrane is fast enough to account for the rate of receptor accumulation. Third, when receptors were immobilized by a lectin, Concanavalin A, the nerve no longer induced receptor accumulation. Thus the diffusion trap model seems adequate to accommodate these observations. Aside from this diffusion mediated mechanism, it is conceivable that newly formed receptors are preferentially inserted at the nerve contact site and these new receptors become immobilized at the site of insertion. To test this hypothesis we stained new receptors separately from old ones and quantitatively compared their distribution. For this purpose we developed a method to quantify fluorescence micrographs. We found that the ratio between old and new receptors was similar at all nerve-induced clusters examined and at the diffusely distributed region.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The effects of muscle activity on the growth of synaptic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) accumulations and on the metabolic AChR stability were investigated in rat skeletal muscle. Ectopic end plates induced surgically in adult soleus muscle were denervated early during development when junctional AChR number and stability were still low and, subsequently, muscles were either left inactive or they were kept active by chronic exogenous stimulation. AChR numbers per ectopic AChR cluster and AChR stabilities were estimated from the radioactivity and its decay with time, respectively, of end plate sites whose AChRs had been labeled with 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-butx). The results show that the metabolic stability of the AChRs in ectopic clusters is reversibly increased by muscle activity even when innervation is eliminated very early in development. 1 d of stimulation is sufficient to stabilize the AChRs in ectopic AChR clusters. Muscle stimulation also produced an increase in the number of AChRs at early denervated end plates. Activity-induced cluster growth occurs mainly by an increase in area rather than in AChR density, and for at least 10 d after denervation is comparable to that in normally developing ectopic end plates. The possible involvement of AChR stabilization in end plate growth is discussed.  相似文献   

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At cholinergic synapses, acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is critical for ensuring normal synaptic transmission. However, little is known about how this enzyme is maintained and regulated in vivo. In this work, we demonstrate that the dissociation of fluorescently-tagged fasciculin 2 (a specific and selective peptide inhibitor of AChE) from AChE is extremely slow. This fluorescent probe was used to study the removal and insertion of AChE at individual synapses of living adult mice. After a one-time blockade of AChEs with fluorescent fasciculin 2, AChEs are removed from synapses initially at a faster rate (t(1/2) of approximately 3 days) and later at a slower rate (t(1/2) of approximately 12 days). Most of the removed AChEs are replaced by newly inserted AChEs over time. However, when AChEs are continuously blocked with fasciculin 2, the removal rate increases substantially (t(1/2) of approximately 12 h), and most of the lost AChEs are not replaced by newly inserted AChE. Furthermore, complete one-time inactivation of AChE activity significantly increases the removal of postsynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs). Finally, time lapse imaging reveals that synaptic AChEs and AChRs that are removed from synapses are co-localized in the same pool after being internalized. These results demonstrate a remarkable AChE dynamism and argue for a potential link between AChE function and postsynaptic receptor lifetime.  相似文献   

12.
Fast and accurate synaptic transmission requires high-density accumulation of neurotransmitter receptors in the postsynaptic membrane. During development of the neuromuscular junction, clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChR) is one of the first signs of postsynaptic specialization and is induced by nerve-released agrin. Recent studies have revealed that different mechanisms regulate assembly vs stabilization of AChR clusters and of the postsynaptic apparatus. MuSK, a receptor tyrosine kinase and component of the agrin receptor, and rapsyn, an AChR-associated anchoring protein, play crucial roles in the postsynaptic assembly. Once formed, AChR clusters and the postsynaptic membrane are stabilized by components of the dystrophin/utrophin glycoprotein complex, some of which also direct aspects of synaptic maturation such as formation of postjunctional folds. Nicotinic receptors are also expressed across the peripheral and central nervous system (PNS/CNS). These receptors are localized not only at the pre- but also at the postsynaptic sites where they carry out major synaptic transmission. In neurons, they are found as clusters at synaptic or extrasynaptic sites, suggesting that different mechanisms might underlie this specific localization of nicotinic receptors. This review summarizes the current knowledge about formation and stabilization of the postsynaptic apparatus at the neuromuscular junction and extends this to explore the synaptic structures of interneuronal cholinergic synapses.  相似文献   

13.
The formation of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters at the neuromuscular junction was investigated by observing the sequential changes in AChR cluster distribution on cultured Xenopus muscle cells. AChRs were labeled with tetramethylrhodamine-conjugated alpha-bungarotoxin (TMR-alpha BT). Before innervation AChRs were distributed over the entire surface of muscle cells with occasional spots of high density (hot spots). When the nerve contacted the muscle cell, the large existing hot spots disappeared and small AChR clusters (less than 1 micron in diameter) initially emerged from the background along the area of nerve contact. They grew in size, increased in number, and fused to form larger clusters over a period of 1 or 2 days. Receptor clusters did not migrate as a whole as observed during "cap" formation in B lymphocytes. The rate of recruitment of AChRs at the nerve-muscle junction varied from less than 50 binding sites to 1000 sites/hr for alpha BT. In this study the diffusion-trap mechanism was tested for the nerve-induced receptor accumulation. The diffusion coefficient of diffusely distributed AChRs was measured using the fluorescence photobleaching recovery method and found to be 2.45 X 10(-10) cm2/sec at 22 degrees C. There was no significant difference in these values among the muscle cells cultured without nerve, the non-nerve-contacted muscle cells in nerve-muscle cultures, and the nerve-contacted muscle cells. It was found that the diffusion of receptors in the membrane is not rate-limiting for AChR accumulation.  相似文献   

14.
The effect of denervation on acetylcholine receptor (AChR) cluster distribution on cultured Xenopus muscle cells has been examined in order to study the role of intact nerve in the maintenance of clusters at the nerve-muscle junction during development. AChRs on the muscle cell were labeled with tetramethyl rhodamine-conjugated alpha-bungarotoxin and sequential changes in AChR cluster distribution were examined with a fluorescence microscope using an image intensifier. Denervation was carried out by exposing the nerve cell body to a focused laser light of a high intensity. After this procedure the neurites originating from the cell quickly disintegrated and large AChR clusters associated with nerve divided into smaller clusters. Individual clusters subsequently decreased in size and finally disappeared. In about 30% of the cases new AChR clusters appeared at the extrajunctional region after denervation. These observations indicate that intact nerves are necessary for the maintenance of receptor localization at the nerve-muscle junction and that nerve-induced accumulation is seemingly reversible during the early period of synapse formation. We tested the idea that receptor clusters were lost due to diffusion of receptors in the muscle membrane after denervation. However, the rate of receptor cluster dispersal after denervation was much slower than that predicted by the diffusion model, suggesting that diffusion of receptors is not a rate-limiting step. Furthermore, we found that receptor clusters at the junction stabilize during days in culture. Thus, 80-90% of receptor clusters at the nerve-muscle junction disappeared at 7 hr after denervation in 1-day cocultures, while about 50% of receptor clusters remained after denervation in 3-day cocultures.  相似文献   

15.
Nitric oxide (NO), previously demonstrated to participate in the regulation of the resting membrane potential in skeletal muscles via muscarinic receptors, also regulates non-quantal acetylcholine (ACh) secretion from rat motor nerve endings. Non-quantal ACh release was estimated by the amplitude of endplate hyperpolarization (H-effect) following a blockade of skeletal muscle post-synaptic nicotinic receptors by (+)-tubocurarine. The muscarinic agonists oxotremorine and muscarine lowered the H-effect and the M1 antagonist pirenzepine prevented this effect occurring at all. Another muscarinic agonist arecaidine but-2-ynyl ester tosylate (ABET), which is more selective for M2 receptors than for M1 receptors and 1,1-dimethyl-4-diphenylacetoxypiperidinium (DAMP), a specific antagonist of M3 cholinergic receptors had no significant effect on the H-effect. The oxotremorine-induced decrease in the H-effect was calcium and calmodulin-dependent. The decrease was negated when either NO synthase was inhibited by N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester or soluble guanylyl cyclase was inhibited by 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one. The target of muscle-derived NO is apparently nerve terminal guanylyl cyclase, because exogenous hemoglobin, acting as an NO scavenger, prevented the oxotremorine-induced drop in the H-effect. These results suggest that oxotremorine (and probably also non-quantal ACh) selectively inhibit the non-quantal secretion of ACh from motor nerve terminals acting on post-synaptic M1 receptors coupled to Ca(2+) channels in the sarcolemma to induce sarcoplasmic Ca(2+)-dependent synthesis and the release of NO. It seems that a substantial part of the H-effect can be physiologically regulated by this negative feedback loop, i.e., by NO from muscle fiber; there is apparently also Ca(2+)- and calmodulin-dependent regulation of ACh non-quantal release in the nerve terminal itself, as calmidazolium inhibition of the calmodulin led to a doubling of the resting H-effect.  相似文献   

16.
The efficiency of synaptic transmission between nerve and muscle depends on the number and density of acetylcholinesterase molecules (AChE) at the neuromuscular junction. However, little is known about the way this density is maintained and regulated in vivo. By using time lapse and quantitative fluorescence imaging assays in living mice, we demonstrated that insertion of new AChEs occurs within hours of saturating pre-existing AChEs with fasciculin2, a snake toxin that selectively labels AChE. In the absence of muscle postsynaptic activity or evoked nerve presynaptic neurotransmitter release, AChE insertion was decreased significantly, whereas direct stimulation of the muscle completely restored AChE insertion to control levels. This activity-dependent AChE insertion is mediated by intracellular calcium. In muscle stimulated in the presence of a Ca2+ channel blocker or calcium-permeable Ca2+ chelator, AChE insertion into synapses was significantly decreased, whereas ryanodine or ionophore A12387 treatment of blocked and unstimulated synapses significantly increased AChE insertion. These results demonstrated that synaptic activity is critical for AChE insertion and indicated that a rise in intracellular calcium either through voltage-gated calcium channels or from intracellular stores is critical for proper AChE insertion into the adult synapse.  相似文献   

17.
Exposure of sternomastoid muscles excised from 16-day embryonic rats to medium depleted of Ca2+ or containing high concentrations of KCl leads to extensive loss of aggregates of acetylcholine receptors newly formed at the motor end plate region. Upon restoration of Ca2+ or removal of excess KCl, receptor accumulations reappear in the central regions of about one-third of the muscle fibers. This susceptibility of junctional AChR aggregates lasts only a short while during development of the neuromuscular junction. By the time of birth, end plate receptor aggregates have become resistant to these treatments.  相似文献   

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Isolated motor endplates from mouse intercostal muscles can be obtained after subcellular fractionation. On these motor endplates, localization of the nicotinic receptor and of the voltage-dependent Na+ channel coincides as demonstrated by double labeling with rhodamine alpha-bungarotoxin and a specific anti-Na+ channel monoclonal antibody. High density of Na+ channel at the motor endplate is confirmed by the enrichment in TTX binding sites as compared to the crude homogenate. In contrast isolated motor endplates are almost completely devoid of Ca2+ channel antagonist binding sites.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Bass and Moore [Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 55:1214 (1966)] proposed that the vesicles containing acetylcholine undergo Brownian motion in the nerve terminals. Acetylcholine is released whenever a vesicle touches the inner face of the axolemma of the nerve terminal. The frequency at which contact is made is limited by an energy barrier that must be overcome before the vesicle can touch the axolemma. The energy barrier has two components. (1) An electrostatic repulsion between positive, fixed charges on the vesicles and a relatively positive potential at the face of the axolemma that is generated by the resting potential. (2) A layer of water molecules held to the vesicle by the surface charge. This model is inconsistent with experimental data. A modification of the model is presented. Both the vesicle and the inner face of the axolemma are assumed to have fixed, negative surface charges that are responsible for the energy barrier. By a series of simplifications, the model leads to two predictions. (1) A plot of the ln (miniature end plate potentials/sec) as a function of the concentration of ions in the axoplasm)–0.5 should give a straight line. (2) A plot of ln (end plate potential amplitudes) as a function of (extracellular Ca++ concentration)–0.5 should give a straight line. These predictions are shown to agree reasonably well with experimental data.  相似文献   

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