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1.
Innervation of the neuromuscular junction (nmj) affects the stability of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs). A neural factor that could affect AChR stabilization was studied using cultured muscle cells since they express two distinct populations of AChRs similar to those seen at the nmjs of denervated muscle. These two AChR populations are (in a ratio of 9 to 1) a rapidly degrading population (Rr) with a degradation half-life of ~1 d and a slowly degrading population (Rs) that can alternate between an accelerated form (half-life ~3–5 d) and a stabilized form (half-life ~10 d), depending upon the state of innervation of the muscle.

Previous studies have shown that elevation of intracellular cAMP can stabilize the Rs, but not the Rr. We report here that in cultured rat muscle cells, exogenous ATP stabilized the degradation half-life of Rr and possibly also the Rs. Furthermore, pretreatment with ATP caused more stable AChRs to be inserted into the muscle membrane. Thus, in the presence of ATP, the degradation rates of the Rr and Rs overlap. This suggests that ATP released from the nerve may play an important role in the regulation of AChR degradation. Treatment with either the cAMP analogue dibutyryl-cAMP (dB-cAMP) or the calcium mobilizer ryanodine caused the ATP-stabilized Rr to accelerate back to a half-life of 1 d. Thus, at least three signaling systems (intracellular cAMP, Ca2+, and extracellular ATP) have the potential to interact with each other in the building of an adult neuromuscular junction.

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2.
G Fumagalli  S Balbi  A Cangiano  T L?mo 《Neuron》1990,4(4):563-569
The number and metabolic stability of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) at neuromuscular junctions of rat tibialis anterior (TA) and soleus (SOL) muscles were examined after denervation, paralysis by continuous application of tetrodotoxin to the nerve, or denervation and direct stimulation of the muscle through implanted electrodes. After 18 days of denervation AChR half-life declined from about 10 days to 2.3 days (TA) or 3.6 days (SOL) and after 18 days of nerve conduction block to 3.1 days (TA). In contrast, the total number of AChRs per endplate was unaffected by these treatments. Denervation for 33 days had no further effect on AChR half-life but reduced the total number of AChRs to about 54% (SOL) or 38% (TA) of normal. Direct stimulation of the 33-day denervated SOL from day 18 restored normal AChR stability and counteracted muscle atrophy but had no effect on the decline in AChR number. The results indicate that motoneurons control the stability of junctional AChRs through evoked muscle activity and the number of junctional AChRs through trophic factors.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Y Gu  Z W Hall 《Neuron》1988,1(2):117-125
We used specific antibodies to gamma, delta, and epsilon subunits to characterize acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in extracts and at endplates of developing, adult, and denervated rat muscle. The AChRs in normal adult muscle were immunoprecipitated by anti-epsilon and anti-delta, but not by anti-gamma antibodies, whereas AChRs in denervated and embryonic muscles were precipitated by anti-gamma and anti-delta, but showed little or no reactivity to anti-epsilon antibodies. In immunofluorescence experiments, AChRs at neonatal endplates bound antibodies to gamma or delta, but not epsilon, subunit, whereas those in adult muscles bound antibodies to epsilon or delta, but not gamma, subunit. AChRs at denervated endplates and at developing endplates between postnatal days 9 and 16 bound all three antibodies. We conclude that the distribution of gamma and epsilon subunits of the AChR parallels the distribution of AChRs with embryonic and adult channel properties, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
Neuromuscular synaptic transmission depends upon tight packing of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) into postsynaptic AChR aggregates, but not all postsynaptic AChRs are aggregated. Here we describe a new confocal Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) assay for semi-quantitative comparison of the degree to which AChRs are aggregated at synapses. During the first month of postnatal life the mouse tibialis anterior muscle showed increases both in the number of postsynaptic AChRs and the efficiency with which AChR was aggregated (by FRET). There was a concurrent two-fold increase in immunofluorescent labeling for the AChR-associated cytoplasmic protein, rapsyn. When 1-month old muscle was denervated, postsynaptic rapsyn immunostaining was reduced, as was the efficiency of AChR aggregation. In vivo electroporation of rapsyn-EGFP into muscle fibers increased postsynaptic rapsyn levels. Those synapses with higher ratios of rapsyn-EGFP to AChR displayed a slower metabolic turnover of AChR. Conversely, the reduction of postsynaptic rapsyn after denervation was accompanied by an acceleration of AChR turnover. Thus, a developmental increase in the amount of rapsyn targeted to the postsynaptic membrane may drive enhanced postsynaptic AChRs aggregation and AChR stability within the postsynaptic membrane.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Many studies exist on the effect of denervation on the degradation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) at the vertebrate neuromuscular junction (nmj). These studies have described the behavior of either the total population of junctional receptors at different times after denervation, or of the receptors present at the time of denervation (referred to as original receptors). No experimental studies yet exist on the degradation rate of the receptors newly inserted into denervated junctions. In the previous studies, the original receptors of mouse sternomastoid muscles were found to retain the slow degradation (t 1/2) of approximately 8-10 d of innervated junctional receptors for up to 10 d after denervation before accelerating to a t 1/2 of approximately 3 d. The total junctional receptors, on the other hand, showed a progressive increase in degradation rate from a t 1/2 of 8-10 d to a t 1/2 of 1 d. To reconcile these earlier observations, the present study examines the degradation of new receptors inserted into the nmj after denervation. To avoid possible contamination of the data with postdenervation extrajunctional receptors, we used transmission electron microscope autoradiography to study only receptors located at the postjunctional fold of the nmj. We established that the new receptors inserted into denervated junctions have a t 1/2 of approximately 1 d, considerably faster than that of the original receptors and equivalent to that of postdenervation extrajunctional receptors. Both original and new receptors are interspersed at the top of the junctional folds. Thus, until all the original receptors are degraded, the postjunctional membrane contains two populations of AChRs that maintain a total steady-state site density but degrade at different rates. The progressive increase in turnover rate of total AChRs therefore reflects the combined rates of the original and new receptors, as earlier postulated by Levitt and Salpeter (1981).  相似文献   

8.
During the development of the neuromuscular junction, motor axons induce the clustering of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) and increase their metabolic stability in the muscle membrane. Here, we asked whether the synaptic organizer agrin might regulate the metabolic stability and density of AChRs by promoting the recycling of internalized AChRs, which would otherwise be destined for degradation, into synaptic sites. We show that at nerve-free AChR clusters induced by agrin in extrasynaptic membrane, internalized AChRs are driven back into the ectopic synaptic clusters where they intermingle with pre-existing and new receptors. The extent of AChR recycling depended on the strength of the agrin stimulus, but not on the development of junctional folds, another hallmark of mature postsynaptic membranes. In chronically denervated muscles, in which both AChR stability and recycling are significantly decreased by muscle inactivity, agrin maintained the amount of recycled AChRs at agrin-induced clusters at a level similar to that at denervated original endplates. In contrast, AChRs did not recycle at agrin-induced clusters in C2C12 or primary myotubes. Thus, in muscles in vivo, but not in cultured myotubes, neural agrin promotes the recycling of AChRs and thereby increases their metabolic stability.  相似文献   

9.
The degradation rates of acetylcholine receptors (AchRs) were evaluated at the neuromuscular junction during and just after reinnervation of denervated muscles. When mouse sternomastoid muscles are denervated by multiple nerve crush, reinnervation begins 2-4 days later and is complete by day 7-9 after the last crush. In fully innervated muscles, the AChR degradation rate is stable and slow (t1/2 approximately 10 days), whereas after denervation the newly inserted receptors degrade rapidly (t1/2 approximately 1.2 days). The composite profile of degradation, which a mixture of the stable and the rapid receptors would give, is not observed during reinnervation. Instead, the receptors inserted between 2.5 and 7.5 days after the last crush all have an intermediate degradation rate of t1/2 approximately 3.7 days with standard error +/- 0.3 days. The total receptor site density at the endplate was evaluated during denervation and during reinnervation. As predicted theoretically, the site density increased substantially, but temporarily, after denervation. An analogous deleterious substantial decrease in density would be expected during reinnervation, without the intermediate receptor. This decrease is not observed, however, because of a large insertion rate at intermediate times (3000 +/- 700 receptor complexes per micro m2 per day). The endplate density of receptors thus remains relatively constant.  相似文献   

10.
The rate constants for internalization and subsequent extrusion of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) during degradation in adult innervated and denervated mouse diaphragm muscles were determined using proteinase K (PK) digestion. This procedure separated 125I-α-bungarotoxin (Bgt)-labeled AChRs into PK-sensitive and PK-resistant compartments. The time course of the residual radioactivity in these two compartments suggested that they represented surface membrane and internalized compartments, respectively. The data were compatible with a mathematical model based on the assumption that during degradation of AChRs a surface compartment, A, fed an internal compartment, B, with an internalization rate constant (ki), and that B is drained from the cell with an extrusion rate constant (ko). Using the mathematical model, we were able to determine that ki and ko were, respectively, 0.068 (t1/2 ∼ 10.2 days) and 0.69–0.55 (t1/2 ∼ 1.0– 1.25 days) for innervated muscle and were, respectively, 0.69 (t1/2 ∼ 1.0 day) and 6.93 (t1/2 ∼ 0.1day) for denervated muscle. Thus, the rate for internalization was about 8–10 times slower than that for extrusion from the cell for both the slowly degrading innervated (Rs) AChRs and for the rapidly degrading denervated (Rr) AChRs. This inequality betweeen ki and ko therefore allows the combined quantity of A(t) + B(t) , usually measured in AChR degradation studies, to approximate a single exponential. J. Cell. Physiol. 181:107–112, 1999. © 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
In order to determine the roles of nerves in the formation of clusters of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) during synaptogenesis, we examined the distribution of AChRs in denervated, nerve-transplanted (neurotized) muscles and in regenerated skeletal muscles of adult chickens by fluorescence microscopy using curaremimetic toxins. In the denervated muscles, many extrajunctional clusters developed at the periphery of some of the muscle nuclei of a single muscle fiber and continued to be present for up to 3 months. The AChR accumulations originally present at the neuromuscular junctions disappeared within 3 weeks. In the neurotized muscles, line-shaped AChR clusters developed at 4 days after transection of the original nerve, but no change in the distribution of AChRs had occurred even at 2 months after implantation of the foreign nerve. The line-shaped AChR clusters were found to be newly formed junctional clusters as they were associated with nerve terminals of similar shape and size. Some of both the line-shaped and extrajunctional clusters were formed at least partly by the redistribution of preexisting AChRs. Finally, based on the above observations, the regenerating muscle fibers in normal muscles and in denervated muscles were examined: The extrajunctional clusters appeared in both kinds of muscles at 2 weeks after injury. Afterward, during the innervation process, the line-shaped AChR clusters developed while the extrajunctional clusters disappeared in the innervated muscles. In contrast with this, in the absence of innervation, only the extrajunctional clusters continued to be present for up to 3 months. These results demonstrate clearly that the nerve not only induces the formation of junctional clusters at the contact site, but also prevents the formation of clusters at the extrajunctional region during synaptogenesis.  相似文献   

12.
The present work addresses the effects of short-term denervation on acetylcholinesterase (AChE; EC 3.1.1.7) isoenzymes in anterior gracilis muscles from adult male Sprague-Dawley rats. It examines possible relationships between AChE isoform changes and other denervation phenomena, and evaluates the importance of acetylcholine (ACh)-nicotinic receptor interactions in selectively modulating the activity of G4 AChE. Results confirm that denervation causes a specific, transient increase in G4 AChE and show that: most of the increment can be explained by the hydrophobic species of this isoenzyme; changes in AChE isoforms markedly precede the onset of spontaneous electromechanical activity (fibrillation), as well as acetylcholine receptor (AChR) proliferation; and the G4 AChE response is eliminated when AChRs are blocked by alpha-bungarotoxin treatment performed before but not after (24 h) denervation. These data point to the absence of direct causal relationships between the G4 AChE increment and fibrillation, AChR proliferation, or changes in the release of this isoform from denervated muscle. In turn, they suggest the participation of AChR activation in triggering the G4 AChE response and emphasize the possible role of ACh-AChR interactions in modulating the production of this isoenzyme in not only denervated but also innervated fast-twitch muscles.  相似文献   

13.
Assembly of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits was investigated using mouse fibroblast cell lines stably expressing either Torpedo (All-11) or mouse (AM-4) alpha, beta, gamma, and delta AChR subunits. Both cell lines produce fully functional cell surface AChRs. We find that two independent treatments, lower temperature and increased intracellular cAMP can increase AChR expression by increasing the efficiency of subunit assembly. Previously, we showed that the rate of degradation of individual subunits was decreased as the temperature was lowered and that Torpedo AChR expression was acutely temperature sensitive, requiring temperatures lower than 37 degrees C. We find that Torpedo AChR assembly efficiency increases 56-fold as the temperature is decreased from 37 to 20 degrees C. To determine how much of this is a temperature effect on degradation, mouse AChR assembly efficiencies were determined and found to be only approximately fourfold more efficient at 20 than at 37 degrees C. With reduced temperatures, we can achieve assembly efficiencies of Torpedo AChR in fibroblasts of 20-35%. Mouse AChR in muscle cells is also approximately 30% and we obtain approximately 30% assembly efficiency of mouse AChR in fibroblasts (with reduced temperatures, this value approaches 100%). Forskolin, an agent which increases intracellular cAMP levels, increased subunit assembly efficiencies twofold with a corresponding increase in cell surface AChR. Pulse-chase experiments and immunofluorescence microscopy indicate that oligomer assembly occurs in the ER and that AChR oligomers remain in the ER until released to the cell surface. Once released, AChRs move rapidly through the Golgi membrane to the plasma membrane. Forskolin does not alter the intracellular distribution of AChR. Our results indicate that cell surface expression of AChR can be regulated at the level of subunit assembly and suggest a mechanism for the cAMP-induced increase in AChR expression.  相似文献   

14.
The clustering of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) is one of the first events observed during formation of the neuromuscular junction. To determine the mechanism involved in AChR clustering, we established a nonmuscle cell line (mouse fibroblast L cells) that stably expresses just one muscle-specific gene product, the AChR. We have shown that when Torpedo californica AChRs are expressed in fibroblasts, their immunological, biochemical, and electrophysiological properties all indicate that fully functional cell surface AChRs are produced. In the present study, the cell surface distribution and stability of Torpedo AChRs expressed in fibroblasts (AChR-fibroblasts) were analyzed and shown to be similar to nonclustered AChRs expressed in muscle cells. AChR-fibroblasts incubated with antibodies directed against the AChR induced the formation of small AChR microclusters (less than 0.5 micron 2) and caused an increase in the internalization rate and degradation of surface AChRs (antigenic modulation) in a manner similar to that observed in muscle cells. Two disparate sources of AChR clustering factors, extracellular matrix isolated from Torpedo electric organ and conditioned media from a rodent neuroblastoma-glioma hybrid cell line, each induced large (1-3 microns 2), stable AChR clusters with no change in the level of surface AChR expression. By exploiting the temperature-sensitive nature of Torpedo AChR assembly, we were able to demonstrate that factor-induced clusters were produced by mobilization of preexisting surface AChRs, not by directed insertion of newly synthesized AChRs. AChR clusters were never observed in the absence of extracellular synaptic factors. Our results suggest that these factors can interact directly with the AChR.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The effects of denervation and of direct electrical stimulation of denervated muscle upon the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) spots in the fast avian muscle posterior latissimus dorsi have been investigated. Denervation at day 2 after hatching leads to a disappearance of the junctional AChR clusters and to a marked decrease of AChE spots. Direct electrical stimulation of denervated muscle allows the maintenance of AChR clusters and partly prevents the loss of AChE spots. When AChR cluster and post-synaptic AChE have disappeared in a denervated muscle, muscle activity induced by direct stimulation is unable to induce their accumulation.  相似文献   

17.
After section of the sciatic nerve, the basal adenylate cyclase (AC) activity in rat gastrocnemius muscle increased 6-7 times per membrane protein and about 2 times per whole muscle in the following 30 or 40 days. The AC activity in the muscle 30 days after denervation was increased about 4 times by forskolin. Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) also increased the adenylate cyclase activity in the denervated muscle. The binding of [3H]-forskolin (10nM) to cells isolated from gastrocnemius muscle was examined to determine the amount of AC molecules. Inhibition of [3H]-forskolin binding by increasing amounts of unlabeled forskolin gave a sigmoid curve with a IC50 value of 3 x 10(-7) M. Results showed that the number of [3H]-forskolin binding sites per cell was higher on the denervated side than on the control side, like the basal AC activity. The IC50 values for inhibition by unlabeled forskolin of binding of [3H]-forskolin were similar to muscles on the control and denervated sides. These results suggest that an increase in the AC activity induced by denervation was due to an increase in the numbers of AC molecules in the muscle.  相似文献   

18.
We have investigated the sequential changes of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) distribution on identified Xenopus laevis muscle cells in culture before and after innervation. AChRs on muscle cells were stained with tetramethylrhodamine-conjugated alpha-bungarotoxin and the distribution of AChR clusters was examined on a fluorescence microscope using an image intensifier. Large receptor clusters were identified on muscle cells and their fate was followed afterward. In muscle cells cultured without neural tube cells, about one-half of the identified AChR clusters survived for 2 days. In nerve-muscle cocultures, preexisting AChR clusters survived longer on non-nerve-contacted muscle cells than on muscle cells cultured without nerve. However, in nerve-contacted muscle cells the great majority of preexisting AChR clusters dispersed within 2 days. The dispersal of preexisting AChR clusters preceded receptor accumulation along the path of nerve contact by about 12-16 hr. Therefore, an accelerated dispersal of receptor clusters in innervated muscle cells is not a consequence of receptor accumulation along the nerve. The preexisting AChR clusters located near and far from the nerve contact sites dispersed along a similar time course. Protease inhibitors, trasylol and leupeptin, reduced the nerve-induced dispersal of the preexisting AChR clusters in the period before AChR accumulation at the nerve contact sites but did not do so during the period when AChRs began to accumulate at nerve-muscle contact. The significance of the dispersal of preexisting receptor clusters is discussed with regard to neuromuscular junction formation.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract: In vertebrate neuromuscular junctions, post-synaptic specialization includes aggregation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE). The motor nerve provides soluble factors and electrical activity to achieve this striking localization of AChRs/AChE. Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), a neuropeptide synthesized by motor neurons, is able to stimulate the expression of AChR in cultured myotubes. Similar to AChR regulation, synthesis of AChE in cultured chick myotubes is also stimulated by CGRP. Application of CGRP onto cultured myotubes stimulated the accumulation of intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) as well as the expression of AChE mRNA and protein. However, the enzymatic activity of AChE remained unchanged. In cultured myotubes, various drugs affecting the intracellular level of cAMP, such as N 6, O 2'-dibutyryladenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, cholera toxin, and forskolin, could mimic the effect of CGRP in stimulating the expression of AChE. When myotubes were transfected with cDNA encoding constitutively active mutant Gαs, the intracellular cAMP synthesis was increased. The increase in cAMP level was in parallel with an increase in the expression of AChE, whereas transfection of active mutant Gαi cDNA decreased the cAMP level as well as the AChE expression. In addition, expression of collagen-tailed AChE was up-regulated by the cAMP pathway. These findings indicated that CGRP-induced AChE regulation is mediated by the cAMP pathway and represented the first evidence to suggest that the regulation of mRNA synthesis of AChR and AChE can be mediated by the same neuron-derived factor.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of cyclic AMP (cAMP) analogs and phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitors on neurite outgrowth was studied in explant cultures of olfactory neurons. Nasal pits from 5- or 6-day-old chick embryos were minced, explanted into culture dishes, and grown in a serum-free medium. One of the cyclic AMP analogs, dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP) or 8-bromo-cyclic AMP (8-Br-cAMP), or one of the PDE inhibitors, theophylline or isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX), was added to the culture medium. The explants were examined for neurite outgrowth after 2 days in vitro. Db-cAMP increased the number of explants expressing neurites by 25-35% over control cultures, whereas 8-Br-cAMP had essentially no effect at the same concentrations. Addition of dibutyryl cyclic GMP (dbcGMP) gave no increase in neurite outgrowth, thus indicating that the effect of enhancing neuritic growth is specific to cAMP and not cyclic nucleotides in general. The resulting increase in neurite outgrowth is due to the cyclic nucleotide component of dbcAMP, since both IBMX and theophylline, which elevate intracellular cAMP, also increased neurite outgrowth significantly. When forskolin was added to the culture medium, there was a trend to increased neurite outgrowth; this was significantly enhanced when a subthreshold concentration of theophylline was added in addition to the forskolin.  相似文献   

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