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1.
alpha-Latrotoxin, a presynaptic neurotoxin from the venom of Latrodectus mactans tredecimguttatus, induces massive [3H]GABA release from rat brain synaptosomes as a result of interaction with either Ca(2+)-dependent (neurexin 1 alpha or Ca(2+)-independent (latrophilin) membrane receptor. The main aim of the study was to elucidate whether the binding of alpha-latrotoxin to different types of receptors led to [3H]GABA secretion from one pool or in each case the source of neurotransmitter differs: in the presence of Ca2+ exocytosis is induced, while in the absence of Ca(2+)--outflow by mobile membrane GABA transporter from cytoplasm. We examined the effect of the depletion of cytosolic [3H]GABA pool by competitive inhibitors of the GABA transporter (nipecotic acid and 2,4-diaminobutyric acid) on the alpha-latrotoxin-stimulated neurotransmitter release. We also compared the influence of these agents on neurosecretion, evoked by depolarization with that evoked by alpha-latrotoxin. Depolarization was stimulated by 4-aminopyridine in the Ca(2+)-containing saline and high KCl in Ca(2+)-free medium. In synaptosomes treated with nipecotic acid unstimulated [3H]GABA release was significantly augmented and high KCl-evoked Ca(2+)-independent [3H]GABA release was essentially inhibited. But under the same conditions neurosecretion stimulated by alpha-latrotoxin greatly raised with respect to the control response. The similar results were obtained with the synaptosomes treated with 2,4-diaminobutyric acid. Another way to determine which of GABA pool is the target of alpha-latrotoxin action lay in analysis of the toxin effects on the preliminary depolarized synaptosomes. alpha-Latrotoxin influence was diminished by the preceding depolarization by 4-aminopyridine in Ca2+ presence. But after the high KCl stimulation effect of alpha-latrotoxin didn't change. These data suggest that alpha-latrotoxin triggers neurotransmitter release from synaptic vesicles via exocytosis. We suppose that the type of membrane receptor does not determine the mechanism of GABA release evoked by the toxin.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of extracellular monocarboxylates pyruvate and lactate on membrane potentials, acidification and neurotransmitter filling of synaptic vesicles were investigated in experiments with rat brain synaptosomes using [(3)H]GABA and fluorescent dyes, potential-sensitive rhodamine 6G and pH-sensitive acridine orange. In experiments investigating accumulation of acridine orange in synaptic vesicles within the synaptosomes, monocarboxylates, similarly to glucose, ensured generation of the vesicle proton gradient by available and recycled vesicles, and pyruvate demonstrated the highest efficacy. An increase in the level of proton gradient correlated with enhanced accumulation of [(3)H]GABA in synaptic vesicles and resulted in enlarged exocytosis and attenuated the transporter-mediated [(3)H]GABA release. Pyruvate added to glucose-contained medium caused more active binding of rhodamine 6G by synaptosomes that reflected mitochondrial membrane hyperpolarization, and this intensification of nerve terminal energy metabolism resulted in an increase in total ATP content by approximately 25%. Pyruvate also prolonged the state of metabolic competence of nerve terminal preparations, keeping the mitochondrial potential and synaptic vesicle proton gradient at steady levels over a long period of time. Thus, besides glucose, the extracellular monocarboxylates pyruvate and lactate can provide sufficient support of energy-dependent processes in isolated nerve terminals, allowing effective functioning of neurotransmitter release and reuptake systems.  相似文献   

3.
Phenylarsine oxide (PAO) has a number of targets in the neurons, one of them is exocytotic process. In this study, we have focused on the mechanisms of phenylarsine oxide action on Ca(2+)-dependent and Ca(2+)-independent neurotransmitter release from rat brain synaptosomes. We investigated the influence of phenylarsine oxide on: (i) l-[(14)C]glutamate and [(3)H]GABA release and uptake; (ii) plasma membrane potential using a potential-sensitive fluorescent probe rhodamine 6G; (iii) exo/endocytotic process using a pH-sensitive fluorescent probe acridine orange (AO). It has been found that phenylarsine oxide induced deacidification of synaptic vesicles. This effect was completely abolished by preliminary treatment of synaptosomes with a protonophore FCCP indicating that both reagents injured a proton electrochemical gradient. Dissipation of the proton gradient by low concentrations of phenylarsine oxide (not exceed 1 microM) did not prevent KCl-triggered exocytotic response, but essentially modified endocytotic one. At higher concentrations of phenylarsine oxide (up to 10 microM), the proton gradient dissipation was intensified and the exocytotic response was fully abolished. The reagent did not change plasma membrane potential, but depolarized mitochondria. It also caused potent inhibition of the Ca(2+)-stimulated l-[(14)C]glutamate and [(3)H]GABA release and increase the Ca(2+)-independent release of l-[(14)C]glutamate, but not of [(3)H]GABA. Disulfide-reducing reagents (dithiothreitol and beta-mercaptoethanol) completely prevented phenylarsine oxide-evoked injuries. They could also restore the initial levels of the mitochondrial potential, the exocytotic response to KCl and the release and uptake of neurotransmitters. Our data provide the evidence that phenylarsine oxide causes dissipation of synaptic vesicle acidic pool resulting in the reduction of vesicle filling and as consequence in attenuation of Ca(2+)-stimulated neurotransmitter release.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-biphosphate has been implicated in a variety of membrane-trafficking processes, including exocytosis of neurotransmitters. However, there are contradictory findings concerned ability of phenylarsine oxide (PAO), an inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase, to affect exocytotic release of different types of neurotransmitters. We bent our efforts to a detailed analysis of action of PAO on Ca(2+)-dependent and Ca(2+)-independent [3H]GABA release produced by exposure of rat brain synaptosomes to different concentrations of alpha-latrotoxin. We also compared PAO action on alpha-latrotoxin- and 4-aminopyridine (4-AP)-evoked [3H]GABA release. The experiments have shown that release of [3H]GABA evoked by the depolarization with 4-AP was decreased by 80% as a result of action of 3 microM PAO and the complete inhibition of release was observed with 10 microM PAO. When alpha-latrotoxin as a stimulant was applied, release of [3H]GABA was increased as toxin concentration used was elevated from 0.5 to 3.0 nM, however, concomitantly, the response of the toxin-induced [3H]GABA release to PAO became attenuated: 10 microM PAO led to almost complete inhibition of the effect of 0.5 nM alpha-latrotoxin and only partly decreased (by 40%) the response to 3.0 nM alpha-latrotoxin. To test whether the efficacy of PAO depended on the toxin-induced outflow of cytosolic [3H]GABA, synaptosomes with depleted cytosolic [3H]GABA pool were also exploited. Depletion was performed by means of heteroexchange of cytosolic [3H]GABA with nipecotic acid. The experiments have shown that treatment of loaded synaptosomes with nipecotic acid resulted in some increase of [3H]GABA release evoked by 0.5 nM alpha-latrotoxin, but in the two-fold decrease of the response to 3.0 nM alpha-latrotoxin. PAO essentially inhibited [3H]GABA release from depleted synaptosomes irrespective of alpha-latrotoxin concentration used. Therefore, the amount of [3H]GABA released from cytosolic pool determined, in considerable degree, the insensitivity of alpha-latrotoxin action to PAO. Thus, our data show that subnanomolar concentrations of alpha-latrotoxin may be used for stimulation of exocytotic release of [3H]GABA. Exposure of synaptosomes with nanomolar toxin concentrations leads not only to stimulation of exocytosis, but also to leakage of [3H]GABA from cytosolic pool. PAO potently inhibits exocytotic release of [3H]GABA and its inhibitory effectiveness is diminished as far as the outflow of [3H]GABA is elevated.  相似文献   

5.
Presynaptic neurotoxin alpha-latrotoxin, from the venom of Latrodectus mactans tredecimguttatus, causes massive [(3)H]GABA release from rat brain synaptosomes, irrespective of calcium presence in the extracellular medium. Whether the binding of alpha-latrotoxin to Ca(2+)-dependent (neurexin 1 alpha) or to Ca(2+)-independent (latrophilin) receptor triggers [(3)H]GABA release by the same mechanisms or different ones, inducing either exocytotic process or outflow by mobile membrane GABA transporter, is unknown. We examined alpha-latrotoxin-evoked [(3)H]GABA release from synaptosomes which cytosolic [(3)H]GABA pool was depleted either by applying competitive inhibitors of the GABA transporter, nipecotic acid and 2,4-diaminobutyric acid, or by permeation with digitonin. We also compared the effect of the GABA transporter inhibitors on depolarisation-evoked and alpha-latrotoxin-evoked [(3)H]GABA release using as depolarising agents 4-aminopyridine and high KCl in the Ca(2+)-containing and in Ca(2+)-free medium, respectively. Incubation of synaptosomes with nipecotic acid induced the essential acceleration of unstimulated [(3)H]GABA release and deep inhibition of high KCl-evoked Ca(2+)-independent [(3)H]GABA release. In contrast, at the similar conditions the effect of alpha-latrotoxin was greatly augmented with respect to the control response. Another way to assay what GABA pool was involved in alpha-latrotoxin-induced release lays in an analysis of the effects of depolarisation and alpha-latrotoxin in consecutive order. The preliminary 4-aminopyridine-stimulated [(3)H]GABA release attenuated the toxin effect. But when depolarisation occurred in Ca(2+)-free medium, no influence on alpha-latrotoxin effect was revealed. Employing digitonin-permeated synaptosomes, we have shown that alpha-latrotoxin could stimulate [3H]GABA release in the medium with 1mM EGTA, this effect of the toxin was blocked by concanavalin A and was ATP-dependent. The latter suggests that alpha-latrotoxin-released neurotransmitter has the vesicular nature. We assume that the type of the toxin membrane receptor does not determine the mechanisms of [(3)H]GABA release evoked by alpha-latrotoxin.  相似文献   

6.
Ca(2+)-independent [(3)H]GABA release induced by alpha-latrotoxin was found to consist of two sequential processes: a fast initial release realized via exocytosis and more delayed outflow through the plasma membrane GABA transporters [Linetska, M.V., Storchak, L.G., Tarasenko, A.S., Himmelreich, N.H., 2004. Involvement of membrane GABA transporters in alpha-latrotoxin-stimulated [(3)H]GABA release. Neurochem. Int. 44, 303-312]. To characterize the toxin-stimulated events attributable to the transporter-mediated [(3)H]GABA release from rat brain synaptosomes we studied the effect of alpha-latrotoxin on membrane potentials and generation of the synaptic vesicles proton gradient, using fluorescent dyes: potential-sensitive rhodamine 6G and pH-sensitive acridine orange. We revealed that alpha-latrotoxin induced a progressive dose-dependent depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential and an irreversible run-down of the synaptic vesicle proton gradient. Both processes were insensitive to the presence of cadmium, a potent blocker of toxin-formed transmembrane pores, indicating that alpha-latrotoxin-induced disturbance of the plasma membrane permeability was not responsible to these effects. A gradual dissipation of the synaptic vesicle proton gradient closely coupled with lowering the vesicular GABA transporter activity results in a leakage of the neurotransmitter from synaptic vesicles to cytoplasm. As a consequence, there is an essential increase in GABA concentration in a soluble cytosolic pool that appears to be critical parameter for altering the mode of the plasma membrane GABA transporter operation from inward to outward. Thus, our data allow clarifying what cell processes underlain a recruitment of the plasma membrane transporter-mediated pathway in alpha-LTX-stimulated secretion.  相似文献   

7.
The impact of syntaxin and SNAP-25 cleavage on [3H]noradrenaline ([3H]NA) and [3H]dopamine ([3H]DA) exocytotic release evoked by different stimuli was studied in superfused rat synaptosomes. The external Ca2+-dependent K+-induced [3H]catecholamine overflows were almost totally abolished by botulinum toxin C1 (BoNT/C1), which hydrolyses syntaxin and SNAP-25, or by botulinum toxin E (BoNT/E), selective for SNAP-25. BoNT/C1 cleaved 25% of total syntaxin and 40% of SNAP-25; BoNT/E cleaved 40% of SNAP-25 but left syntaxin intact. The GABA uptake-induced releases of [3H]NA and [3H]DA were differentially affected: both toxins blocked the former, dependent on external Ca2+, but not the latter, internal Ca2+-dependent. BoNT/C1 or BoNT/E only slightly reduced the ionomycin-evoked [3H]catecholamine release. More precisely, [3H]NA exocytosis induced by ionomycin was sensitive to toxins in the early phase of release but not later. The Ca2+-independent [3H]NA exocytosis evoked by hypertonic sucrose, thought to release from the readily releasable pool (RRP) of vesicles, was significantly reduced by BoNT/C1. Pre-treating synaptosomes with phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate, to increase the RRP, enhanced the sensitivity to BoNT/C1 of [3H]NA release elicited by sucrose or ionomycin. Accordingly, cleavage of syntaxin was augmented by the phorbol-ester. To conclude, our results suggest that clostridial toxins selectively target exocytosis involving vesicles set into the RRP.  相似文献   

8.
Nitric oxide (NO) modulates processes of synaptic transmission at pre- and postsynaptic levels. In the present work we studied the mechanisms of action of NO on [gamma-14C]amino-n-butyric acid ([14C]GABA) release in rat cortical synaptosomes. NO donors--S-nitroso-L-cysteine and hydroxylamine (but not sodium nitroprusside)--inhibited the neurotransmitter efflux in a concentration range from 10 microM to 1 mM. Nitrosocysteine completely and selectively suppressed the Ca2+-dependent (vesicular) [14C]GABA release, while not affecting the Ca2+-independent component of the [14C]GABA transport. The influence of NO donors was not related to activation of guanylyl cyclase, since the membrane-permeable cGMP analog dibutyryl-cGMP did not mimic and the guanylyl cyclase inhibitor methylene blue did not change the NO effects. In contrast, the membrane-permeable SH-reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) resembled the effects of NO donors on the Ca2+-dependent [14C]GABA release. The degree of inhibition of the release by nitrosocysteine, hydroxylamine, and NEM correlated with their ability to oxidize intra-synaptosomal SH-groups. These data suggest that synaptosomal sulfhydryl groups are the target for NO action at the presynaptic level. The NO-induced oxidation of thiols may be involved in physiological and, especially, pathological effects of nitric oxide in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

9.
Storchak  L.  Tarasenko  A.  Linetska  M.  Pozdnyakova  N.  Himmelreich  N. 《Neurophysiology》2002,34(5):321-325
The main inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA in the mammalian brain is distributed in the nerve terminals between two pools, vesicular (synaptic vesicles) and cytosolic. GABA is released from these pools by different mechanisms; there are calcium-activated exocytotic release and calcium-independent sodium-dependent release from the cytosolic pool (resulting from the membrane GABA transporter reversal). We investigated the influence of temperature on [3H]GABA release from rat brain synaptosomes, which was induced by stimulation of both these processes. In addition, we used -latrotoxin as a stimulant of [3H]GABA release. Synaptosomes from the rat brain were used in the experiments. 4-Aminopyridine (4-AP) and high [KCl] were applied to stimulate calcium-activated and calcium-independent [3H]GABA release, respectively. 4-AP-evoked [3H]GABA release was of the same intensity at 37 and 25°C (10.1 ± 1.2 and 10.1 ± 0.8% of total [3H]GABA incorporated into the synaptosomes, respectively). The effect of 4-AP on the 45Ca2+ influx into synaptosomes was also temperature-independent: 0.775 ± 0.075 and 0.725 ± 0.100 nmol/min/mg of protein at 37 and 25°C, respectively. A drop in the effect of 4-AP was observed only at 15°C. When synaptosomes were depolarized with 50 mM KCl, a temperature decrease from 37°C to 25°C resulted in a twofold drop in the [3H]GABA release, from 20.5 ± 1.4 to 10.3 ± 0.7%; at 15°C [3H]GABA release dropped to less than one-third of the norm (6.0 ± 0.5%). -Latrotoxin-stimulated [3H]GABA release was diminished from 32.5 ± 2.5 at 37°C to 17.2 ± 1.3 at 25°C and 5.9 ± 0.4% at 15°C and was not affected by the presence or absence of calcium in the medium. It seems likely that the observed effect of temperature can be interpreted as based on the temperature dependence of the -latrotoxin insertion into the membrane. It is suggested that the pattern of the temperature sensitivity of GABA release from the synaptosomes can be used as a criterion for identification of the mode of neurotransmitter release.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: Release-regulating heterocarriers exist on brain nerve endings. We have investigated in this study the mechanisms involved in the neurotransmitter release evoked by GABA heterocarrier activation. GABA increased the basal release of [3H]acetylcholine and [3H]noradrenaline from rat hippocampal synaptosomes and of [3H]dopamine from striatal synaptosomes. These GABA effects, insensitive to GABA receptor antagonists, were prevented by inhibiting GABA uptake but not by blocking noradrenaline, choline, or dopamine transport. Lack of extracellular Ca2+ or addition of tetrodotoxin selectively abolished the GABA-evoked release of [3H]noradrenaline, leaving unaffected that of [3H]acetylcholine or [3H]dopamine. 1,2-Bis(2-aminophenoxy)-ethane-N,N,N′,N′-tetraacetic acid acetoxymethyl ester (BAPTA-AM) or vesamicol attenuated the release of [3H]acetylcholine elicited by GABA. Reserpine, but not BAPTA-AM, prevented the effect of GABA on [3H]dopamine release. Autoreceptor activation inhibited the GABA-evoked release of [3H]noradrenaline but not that of [3H]acetylcholine or [3H]dopamine. It is concluded that (a) the release of [3H]noradrenaline consequent to activation of GABA heterocarriers sited on noradrenergic terminals meets the criteria of a conventional exocytotic process, (b) the extracellular [Ca2+]-independent releases of [3H]acetylcholine and [3H]dopamine appear to occur from vesicles possibly through involvement of intraterminal Ca2+, and (c) autoreceptor activation only affects heterocarrier-mediated vesicular release linked to entry of extracellular Ca2+.  相似文献   

11.
The action of the polyether antibiotic monensin on the release of gamma-[3H]amino-n-butyric acid [( 3H]GABA) from mouse brain synaptosomes is characterized. Monensin enhances the release of this amino acid transmitter in a dose-dependent manner and does not modify the efflux of the nontransmitter amino acid alpha-[3H]aminoisobutyrate. The absence of external Ca2+ fails to prevent the stimulatory effect of monensin on [3H]GABA release. Furthermore, monensin is less effective in stimulating [3H]GABA release in the presence of Ca2+. The releasing response to monensin is absolutely dependent on external Na+. The blockade of voltage-sensitive Na+ or Ca2+ channels does not modify monensin-induced release of the transmitter. Also, the blockade of the GABA uptake pathway fails to prevent the stimulatory effect of monensin on [3H]GABA release. Although monensin markedly increases Na+ permeability in synaptosomes, these data indicate that the Ca2+-independent monensin-stimulated transmitter release is not mediated by the Na+-dependent uptake pathway. It is concluded that the entrance of Na+ through monensin molecules inserted in the presynaptic membrane might be sufficient to initiate the intraterminal molecular events underlying transmitter release.  相似文献   

12.
In the present study, we have investigated the role of Ca2+ in the coupling of membrane depolarization to neurotransmitter secretion. We have measured (a) intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) changes, (b) rapid 45Ca2+ uptake, and (c) Ca2+-dependent and -independent release of endogenous glutamate (Glu) and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as a function of stimulus intensity by elevating the extracellular [K+] to different levels in purified nerve terminals (synaptosomes) from rat hippocampus. During stimulation, Percoll-purified synaptosomes show an increased 45Ca2+ uptake, an elevated [Ca2+]i, and a Ca2+-dependent as well as a Ca2+-independent release of both Glu and GABA. With respect to both amino acids, synaptosomes respond on stimulation essentially in the same way, with maximally a fourfold increase in Ca2+-dependent (exocytotic) release. Ca2+-dependent transmitter release as well as [Ca2+]i elevations show maximal stimulation at moderate depolarizations (30 mM K+). A correlation exists between Ca2+-dependent release of both Glu and GABA and elevation of [Ca2+]i. Ca2+-dependent release is maximally stimulated with an elevation of [Ca2+]i of 60% above steady-state levels, corresponding with an intracellular concentration of approximately 400 nM, whereas elevations to 350 nM are ineffective in stimulating Ca2+-dependent release of both Glu and GABA. In contrast, Ca2+-independent release of both Glu and GABA shows roughly a linear rise with stimulus intensity up to 50 mM K+. 45Ca2+ uptake on stimulation also shows a continuous increase with stimulus intensity, although the relationship appears to be biphasic, with a plateau between 20 and 40 mM K+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Under optimised conditions for intoxication, botulinum neurotoxin type A was shown to inhibit approximately 90% of Ca2+-dependent K+-evoked release of [3H]acetylcholine, [3H]noradrenaline, and [3H]dopamine from rat cerebrocortical synaptosomes; cholinergic terminals were most susceptible. In each case, the dose-response curve for the neurotoxin was extended, with about 50% of evoked release being inhibited at approximately 10 nM whereas 200 nM was required for the maximal blockade. This may suggest some heterogeneity in the release process. The action of the toxin was time and temperature dependent and appeared to involve binding and sequestration steps prior to blockade of release. The neurotoxin failed to exert any effect on synaptosomal integrity or on Ca2+-independent release of the transmitters tested; it produced only minimal changes in neurotransmitter uptake although small secondary effects were detected with cholinergic terminals. Blockade by the neurotoxin of Ca2+-dependent resting release of transmitter was apparent; Sr2+, Ba2+, or high concentrations of Ca2+ restored the resting release of 3H-catecholamine but not [3H]acetylcholine. Interestingly, none of the latter conditions or 4-aminopyridine could reverse the toxin-induced blockade of evoked release. This lack of specificity in its action on synaptosomes, and other published findings, lead to the conclusion that toxin-sensitive component(s) exist in all nerve terminals that are concerned with transmitter release.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of the present paper was to determine whether the release of glutamate from putative "glutamergic" terminals in the cerebellum is influenced by gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). In a group of preliminary experiments, we present biochemical evidence in favour of a neurotransmitter role of glutamate in the cerebellum: (1) endogenous glutamate was released from depolarized cerebellar synaptosomal preparations in a Ca2+-dependent away; (2) [14C]glutamate was synthesized from [14C]glutamine in cerebellar synaptosomes, and the newly synthesized [14C]glutamate was released released in a Ca2+-dependent way; (3) the elevation of cyclic GMP elicited by depolarization of cerebellar slices in the presence of Ca2+ was partly reversed by the glutamate antagonist glutamic acid diethyl ester, which probably prevented the interaction of endogenously released glutamate with postsynaptic receptors. GABA and muscimol at low concentrations (2--20 micrometers) potentiated the depolarization-induced release of D-[3H]aspartate (a glutamate analogue which labels the glutamate "reuptake pool") from cerebellar synaptosomes. The effect was concentration dependent and was largely prevented by two GABA antagonists, bicuculline and picrotoxin. The stimulation of D-[3H]aspartate release evoked by muscimol was linearly related to the logarithm of K+ concentration in the depolarizing medium. GABA did not affect the overall release of endogenous glutamate, but potentiated, in a picrotoxin-sensitive manner, the depolarization-evoked release of [14C]glutamate previously synthesized from [14C]glutamine. Since nerve endings are the major site of glutamate synthesis from glutamine, GABA and muscimol appear to exert their stimulatory effect at the level of "glutamergic" nerve terminals, probably after interacting with presynaptic GABA receptors. The possible functional significance of these findings is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Glutamate release and synaptic vesicle heterotypic/homotypic fusion were characterized in brain synaptosomes of rats exposed to hypergravity (10 G, 1 h). Stimulated vesicular exocytosis determined as KCl-evoked fluorescence spike of pH-sensitive dye acridine orange (AO) was decreased twice in synaptosomes under hypergravity conditions as compared to control. Sets of measurements demonstrated reduced ability of synaptic vesicles to accumulate AO (∼10% higher steady-state baseline level of AO fluorescence). Experiments with preloaded l-[14C]glutamate exhibited similar amount of total glutamate accumulated by synaptosomes, equal concentration of ambient glutamate, but the enlarged level of cytoplasmic glutamate measuring as leakage from digitonin-permeabilized synaptosomes in hypergravity. Thus, it may be suggested that +G-induced changes in stimulated vesicular exocytosis were a result of the redistribution of intracellular pool of glutamate, i.e. a decrease in glutamate content of synaptic vesicles and an enrichment of the cytoplasmic glutamate level. To investigate the effect of hypergravity on the last step of exocytosis, i.e. membrane fusion, a cell-free system consisted of synaptic vesicles, plasma membrane vesicles, cytosolic proteins isolated from rat brain synaptosomes was used. It was found that hypergravity reduced the fusion competence of synaptic vesicles and plasma membrane vesicles, whereas synaptosomal cytosolic proteins became more active to promote membrane fusion. The total rate of homo- and heterotypic fusion reaction initiated by Ca2+ or Mg2+/ATP remained unchanged under hypergravity conditions. Thus, hypergravity could induce synaptopathy that was associated with incomplete filling of synaptic vesicles with the neuromediator and changes in exocytotic release.  相似文献   

16.
Neuronal growth cones isolated in bulk from neonatal rat forebrain have uptake and K(+)-stimulated release mechanisms for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Up to and including postnatal day 5, the K(+)-stimulated release of [3H]GABA and endogenous GABA is Ca2+ independent. At these ages, isolated growth cones neither contain synaptic vesicles nor stain for synaptic vesicle antigens. Here we examined the possibility that the release mechanism underlying Ca2(+)-independent GABA release from isolated growth cones is by reversal of the plasma membrane GABA transporter. The effects of two GABA transporter inhibitors, nipecotic acid and an analogue of nipecotic acid, SKF 89976-A, on K(+)-stimulated release of [3H]GABA from superfused growth cones were examined. Nipecotic acid both stimulated basal [3H]GABA release and enhanced K(+)-stimulated release of [3H]GABA, which indicates that this agent can stimulate GABA release and is, therefore, not a useful inhibitor with which to test the role of the GABA transporter in K(+)-stimulated GABA release from growth cones. In contrast, SKF 89976-A profoundly depressed both basal and K(+)-stimulated [3H]GABA release. This occurred at similar concentrations at which uptake was blocked. These observations provide evidence for a major role of the GABA transporter in GABA release from neuronal growth cones.  相似文献   

17.
Guinea-pig synaptosomes possess two functional pools of 4-aminobutyrate (GABA). One is rapidly labelled by added [14C]GABA, is steadily released in a Ca2+-independent manner when the Na+ electrochemical potential across the plasma membrane is collapsed, and is depleted by the GABA analogue 2,4-diaminobutyrate (DABA), all of which is consistent with a cytosolic location. A second, noncytosolic compartment only slowly equilibrates with exogenous [14C]GABA, is not depleted by DABA, but can release 350 pmol of endogenous GABA/mg of protein (8% of the total intrasynaptosomal GABA) within 15 s of depolarization in the presence of Ca2+. Ca2+-independent release occurs by thermodynamic reversal of the plasma membrane uptake pathway following artifactually prolonged depolarization, whereas Ca2+-dependent release is consistent with physiological exocytosis from vesicular stores.  相似文献   

18.

Background

Nitric oxide (NO) is an important presynaptic modulator of synaptic transmission. Here, we aimed to correlate the release of the major inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA with intracellular events occurring in rat brain axon terminals during their exposure to NO in the range of nanomolar–low micromolar concentrations.

Methods

Using [3H]GABA and fluorescent dyes (Fluo 4-AM, acridine orange and rhodamine 6G), the following parameters were evaluated: vesicular and cytosolic GABA pools, intracellular calcium concentration, synaptic vesicle acidification, and mitochondrial membrane potential. Diethylamine NONOate (DEA/NO) and S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) were used as NO donors.

Results

DEA/NO and SNAP (in the presence of dithiothreitol (DTT)) stimulated external Ca2 +-independent [3H]GABA release, which was not attributed to a rise in intracellular calcium concentration. [3H]GABA release coincided with increasing GABA level in cytosol and decreasing the vesicular GABA content available for exocytotic release. There was a strong temporal correlation between NO-induced increase in cytosolic [GABA] and dissipation of both synaptic vesicle proton gradient and mitochondrial membrane potential. Dissipation was reversible, and recovery of both parameters correlated in time with re-accumulation of [3H]GABA into synaptic vesicles. The molar ratio of DTT to SNAP determined the rate and duration of the recovery processes.

Conclusions

We suggest that NO can stimulate GABA release via GABA transporter reversal resulting from increased GABA levels in cytosol. The latter is reversible and appears to be due to S-nitrosylation of key proteins, which affect the energy status of the pre-synapse.

General significance

Our findings provide new insight into molecular mechanism(s) underlying the presynaptic action of nitric oxide on inhibitory neurotransmission.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) on the spontaneous efflux of [3H]norepinephrine ([3H]NE) were studied in synaptosomes prepared from rat hippocampus and prelabelled with [3H]NE. It had been observed previously that, when synaptosomes were exposed in superfusion to GABA, the basal release of the tritiated catecholamine was enhanced, apparently with no involvement of the known GABA receptors. The mechanisms underlying this effect have now been investigated. The potency of GABA as a releaser of [3H]NE was decreased by lowering the Na+ content of the superfusion medium, and its effect disappeared at 23 mM Na+. The GABA-induced [3H]NE release was counteracted by the GABA uptake inhibitor N-(4,4-diphenyl-3-butenyl)nipecotic acid (SKF 89976A), but it was unaffected by the NE uptake blockers desmethylimipramine and nisoxetine. The GABA-induced release of [3H]NE was Ca2+-dependent and tetrodotoxin-sensitive. The data support the hypothesis that GABA provoked [3H]NE release by a novel mechanism which involves penetration into the noradrenergic nerve terminals through a GABA carrier located on the NE terminals themselves. This uptake process might be electrogenic and provoke depolarization of the nerve terminals, causing an exocytotic release of [3H]NE.  相似文献   

20.
The release of [3H]GABA evoked by depolarization with various concentrations of KCl was studied using superfused rat cerebrocortex synaptosomes. Elevating [K+] produced release of [3H]GABA over basal which was increasingly less dependent on external Ca2+ but more sensitive to the GABA transporter blocker SKF 100330 A. Accordingly, the sensitivity to clostridial toxins of the depolarization-evoked amino acid release was inversely correlated to the concentration of KCl used. However, at 50 mM K+, one-third of the stimulated release remained which was external Ca2+-independent but insensitive to SKF 100330 A. This release was prevented by BAPTA, thapsigargin or dantrolene; it also was inhibited by blocking in mitochondria the ATP production with oligomycin, the H+-dependent Ca2+ uniporter with RU 360, the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger with CGP 37157 or by lowering extraterminal [Na+]. In fluorescence experiments with fura-2/AM, 50 mM K+ (in Ca2+ free medium) caused elevation of cytosolic [Ca2+] that was sensitive to thapsigargin or CGP 37157; these compounds produced partially additive effects. When exocytosis was monitored with the fluorescent dye acridine orange, the fluorescence elicited by 50 mM K+ was sensitive to thapsigargin or CGP 37157, which produced additive effects, and to low-Na+ media. To conclude, extracellular K+ concentrations occurring in the CNS in certain pathological conditions provoke GABA release by mechanisms different from classical exocytosis. These include carrier-mediated release and internal Ca2+-dependent exocytosis; in the latter, mitochondrial Ca2+ seems to play a primary role.  相似文献   

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