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Release probability of hippocampal glutamatergic terminals scales with the size of the active zone. Holderith et al, 2012 Amelia Moffatt, October 9 2012 . Introduction . Synapses are diverse in their structure and functioning
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Release probability of hippocampal glutamatergic terminals scales with the size of the active zone Holderith et al, 2012 Amelia Moffatt, October 9 2012
Introduction • Synapses are diverse in their structure and functioning • Probability of neurotransmitter release, size of synaptic vesicles, plasticity at the synapse, and size of post-synaptic response. • To what extent can the morphological features of cortical glutamatergic terminals predict their functional properties? • How the neurotransmitter release probability and presynaptic [Ca2+] transients relate to ultrastructure of hippocampal glutamatergic axon terminals.
Previous Research: • Postsynaptically • Postsynaptic glutamate receptors (AMPA and NMDA), area of PSD and amplitude of postsynaptic response are all correlated. • Presynaptically • Release probability correlates with number of readily releasable vesicles=number docked at presynaptic active zones (AZ). • Number of docked vesicles proportional to area of AZ and volume of terminal. • Larger the presynaptic AZ area=higher the release probability • Challenges of such a clear correlation? **PSD= Postsynaptic density
Methods: • Subject: All brain slices were taken from male Wistar rats (14-17 days old) • Area of Study: CA3 pyramidal cells of the hippocampus- WHY? • Techniques: • In vitro patch clamp electrophoresis • Two-photon fluorescence Ca2+ imaging (learning Issue) • Post-hoc electron-microscopy 3D reconstruction of the imaged pre and post synaptic structures • Freeze fracture immugold labeling (localization of presynaptic proteins) (Learning Issue)
Results: • Morphological Diversity of CA3 pyramidal cell axon terminals • Variability in Release probability and short-term plasticity • Variability in [Ca2+] in CA3 pyramidal cell axon terminals • Contribution of Ca2+ channel subtypes to [Ca2+] in boutons. • Cav2.1 subunit is confined to the presynaptic active zone • Rim1/2 and Cav2.1 have uniform densities in active zones (are not randomly distributed).
Morphological Diversity of terminals: Figure 2 Figure 1
Release probability and short term plasticity: • Significant correlation between PR1 and bouton volume and PR1 and active zone area.
Variability of [Ca2+] in axon terminals: • Bouton volume and amplitude of [Ca2+] transients= no significant correlation. • Amplitude of [Ca2+] transients and active zone area= significant correlation • Total amount of Ca2+ per action potential and active zone area= significant correlation
Contribution of Ca2+ channel subtypes to [Ca2+] in boutons: • Postsynaptic responses are mediated by voltage gated Ca2+ channels (cav)- Learning Issue • Cav2.1 (P/Q-type) • Cav2.2 (N-type) • Cav2.3 (R-type) • When a blocker was used the peak amplitude of Ca2+ transient was reduced. • Cav2.1,Cav2.2 and Cav2.3 subunits mediate postsynaptic responses at hippocampal glutamatergic terminals
Cav2.1 subunits in the presynaptic active zone • Assumption: Number of Cav channels scales linearly with AZ area. • Freeze fractioning and electron microscopy immunogold labeling. • Cav2.1 subunit was confined to the active zone of presynaptic axon terminals of the hippocampal CA3 area. • Tested this by performing a double immunogold label for Rim1/2 and AMPA-type glutamate receptors.
Cav2.1 and Rim1/2 have uniform densities in active zones • Found that release probability of neurotransmitters scales with size of presynaptic active zone. • Leads us to predict that presynaptic AZ has multiple neurotransmitter release sites. • Number of presynaptic AZ proteins should scale linearly with AZ area. • Analyzed: • SNAP-25 • Synaptobrevin • Cav2.1 subunit • Not randomly distributed! • Rim1/2
Cav2.1 and Rim1/2: • Positive correlation between number of gold particles and active zone area.
Conclusion • Research Questions: • How the neurotransmitter release probability and presynaptic [Ca2+] transients relate to ultrastructure of hippocampal glutamatergic axon terminals. • Major Conclusions: • Positive Correlation between release probability and AZ area • Positive Correlation between peak amplitude [Ca2+] transients and AZ area • Cav2.1 subunits and AZ protein Rim1/2 are confined to the AZ, and their numbers scale linearly with AZ area. • Cav2.1 subunits are clustered ‘nonrandomly’ within the AZ
Conclusion: • Inferences: • Vesicle docking and release cannot occur anywhere in the active zone • Every channel within 0.01µm2 of AZ will contribute to release of a vesicle • Estimate 4 CaV channels in 0.01µm2 • 14 presynaptic voltage gated calcium channels facilitating release at the pyramidal cell axon terminal