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Human Cellular Physiology PHSI3004/3904 Secreted signals and synaptic transmission

Human Cellular Physiology PHSI3004/3904 Secreted signals and synaptic transmission. Dr Bill Phillips Dept of Physiology, Anderson Stuart Bldg Rm N348. Secreted signals and synaptic transmission. Chemical signalling between cells Ca 2+ and chemical synaptic transmission

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Human Cellular Physiology PHSI3004/3904 Secreted signals and synaptic transmission

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  1. Human Cellular Physiology PHSI3004/3904Secreted signals and synaptic transmission Dr Bill Phillips Dept of Physiology, Anderson Stuart Bldg Rm N348

  2. Secreted signals and synaptic transmission • Chemical signalling between cells • Ca2+ and chemical synaptic transmission • Neuromuscular synapse • Quantal Release • Vesicle exocytosis and fusion pore • Synaptic vesicle cycle • Organisation of the release site • Kandel et al.2000 Cpts 11 & 14

  3. Types of chemical signals

  4. Forms of release of hydrophilic signalling chemicals • Release from the cytoplasm- regulated membrane channels or transporters • Release from membrane vesicle stores-regulated fusion pore and/or exocytosis

  5. Studying controlled (evoked) neurotransmitter release

  6. Experimental evidence for the role of Ca2+ in transmitter release • Giant synapse of the squid made it possible to study relationship between presynaptic events and neurotransmitter release. • Intracellular electrodes in the nerve terminal recorded presynaptic membrane potential • Intracellular electrode in the postsynaptic cell recorded the excitatory postsynaptic potential (a measure of transmitter release)

  7. Ca2+ influx controls transmitter release • Presynaptic nerve terminal was voltage clamped • Voltage gated Na+ and K+ channels were blocked • Step depolarisation used to open voltage-gated Ca2+ channels • Small increases in inward Ca2+ current led to much bigger proportional increases in postsynaptic response (gauge of transmitter release) Kandel et al. 2000 Fig 14-3

  8. Relationship between Ca2+ influx and transmitter release • Transient increase in [Ca2+]i depends upon both [Ca2+]o and conductance (number of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels open • Two-fold increase in [Ca2+]o results in as much as a 16-fold increase in transmitter release (4-power relationship) • Implies multiple, low affinity binding sites (as many as 4) on “calcium sensor”

  9. Time course of pre- synaptic Ca2+ influx Inward Ca2+ current follows the presynaptic AP and precedes the postsynaptic potential as little as 0.2msec Short delay between Ca2+ influx and transmitter release suggests Ca2+ channels are closely adjacent to Ca2+ sensor and transmitter release site. Ca2+ channels thought to be concentrated in discrete release zones on nerve terminal Kandel et al 2000 Fig 14-4

  10. Types of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels(1 pore-forming subunits encode primary properties)

  11. Neuromuscular Synapse “model” • Vertebrate neuromuscular synapses display highly regulated neurotransmitter release • One nerve cell (motor neuron) controls one target cell (muscle fibre) by releasing acetylcholine (ACh) onto cation channels gated by ACh. • A high density of ACh receptor/channels ensures that the postsynaptic membrane potential responds quickly and quantitatively to the amount of transmitter released by the nerve terminal.

  12. Miniature endplate potentials • Intracellular recordings from the postsynaptic membrane of skeletal muscle fibres show occasional small amplitude depolarisations of ~0.5mV lasting ~2msec called miniature endplate potentials MEPP. • Amplitude of mEPPs decline exponentially with distance from the synapse just like the nerve-evoked endplate potential (EPP)

  13. MEPPs arise from release of quanta of acetylcholine • Each acetylcholine receptor (AChR) channel can depolarise the membrane by only about 0.3V • Thus MEPP (0.5mV) must involve simultaneous opening of ~2,000 AChR channels • Since the AChR has two AChR binding sites and allowing for loss of ACh in the synaptic cleft, a ‘quantum’ of ~5000 molecules of ACh must be released to generate a MEPP

  14. Recording the EPP

  15. Evoked release of acetylcholine occurs in multiples of the quantal amount • When [Ca2+]o is reduced below physiological levels the amplitude of the EPP declines greatly from ~70mV to 0.5- 3mV range, varying from trial to trial • Frequency distributions show that amplitudes of EPPs fell into multiples of the mean amplitude of the spontaneously occurring MEPP

  16. Kandel et al. 2000 Fig 14-6

  17. Number of quanta released depends upon Ca2+ influx • Quanta are released spontaneously (MEPPs) but at very low frequency • Brief high concentration bursts Ca2+ (~0.1mM) massively increases probability of release occuring adjacent to calcium channels • Neuromuscular synapses contain many release sites so coordinated release of ~150 quanta occur, leading to the normal EPP

  18. Quanta are thought to be contained in and released from synaptic vesicles • Nerve terminals contain ~200 synaptic vesicles each about 50nm diameter • These contain neurotransmitter • Electron microscopic rapid freeze evidence indicates synaptic vesicle exocytosis follows nerve terminal depolarisation • Membrane capacitance increases in nerve terminals suggest fusion of vesicle membrane with plasma membrane

  19. Fusion pores • Precise steps in release of transmitter from a synaptic vesicle not fully understood • First step may be formation of a fusion pore the diameter of a gap junction (~2nm) • Some transmitter may diffuse out through this pore • In most cases this is though to dilate to ~8nm leading to full exocytosis

  20. Capacitance evidence for vesicle exocytosis and a fusion pore Kandel et al. 2000 Fig 14-10

  21. “Kiss and Run” release • In some situations the 2nm diameter fusion pore seems to open then close again, without fully dilating • This is known as kiss and run release • It may simplify and speed up recovery and recycling of the synaptic vesicles

  22. Synaptic vesicle recycling Kandel et al. 2000 Fig 14-12

  23. Voltage gated Ca 2+ channels are aligned in rows overlying clusters of postsynaptic ACh receptors Kandel et al 2000 Fig 14-5

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