PRESYNAPTIC CALCIUM SIGNALS DURING NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASE - DETECTION WITH FLUORESCENT INDICATORS AND OTHER CALCIUM CHELATORS

被引:18
作者
AUGUSTINE, GJ
ADLER, EM
CHARLTON, MP
HANS, M
SWANDULLA, D
ZIPSER, K
机构
[1] MARINE BIOL LAB, WOODS HOLE, MA 02543 USA
[2] MASSACHUSETTS GEN HOSP, MOLEC NEUROBIOL LAB, Charlestown, MA USA
[3] UNIV TORONTO, DEPT PHYSIOL, TORONTO M5S 1A1, ONTARIO, CANADA
[4] MAX PLANCK INST BIOPHYS CHEM, W-3400 GOTTINGEN, GERMANY
[5] MIT, DEPT BRAIN & COGNIT SCI, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02139 USA
关键词
CALCIUM; NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASE; FLUORESCENT INDICATORS;
D O I
10.1016/S0928-4257(05)80017-8
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Synthetic calcium buffers, including fluorescent calcium indicators, were microinjected into squid 'giant' presynaptic nerve terminals to investigate the calcium signal that triggers neurotransmitter secretion. Digital imaging methods, applied in conjunction with the fluorescent calcium indicator dye fura-2, reveal that transient rises in presynaptic calcium concentration are associated with action potentials. Transmitter release terminates within 1-2 ms after a train of action potentials, even though presynaptic calcium concentration remains at micromolar levels for many seconds longer. Microinjection of the calcium buffer, EGTA, into the presynaptic terminal has no effect on transmitter release evoked by single presynaptic action potentials. EGTA injection does, however, block the change in calcium concentration measured by fura-2. Therefore, the calcium signal measured by fura-2 is not responsible for triggering release. These results suggest that the rise in presynaptic calcium concentration that triggers release must be highly localized to escape detection with fura-2 imaging. Unlike EGTA, microinjection of BAPTA - a calcium buffer with an equilibrium affinity for calcium similar to that of EGTA - produces a potent, dose-dependent, and reversible block of action-potential evoked transmitter release. The superior ability of BAPTA to block transmitter release apparently is due to the more rapid calcium-binding kinetics of BAPTA compared to EGTA. Because EGTA should bind calcium within a few tens of microseconds under the conditions of our experiments, the inability of EGTA to block release indicates that transmitter release is triggered within a few tens of microseconds after the entry of calcium into the presynaptic terminal. Chemical analogs of BAPTA that have altered affinity for calcium, but presumed similar on rates for calcium binding, have varied abilities to block transmitter release. The differential effects of these buffers on release are consistent with the conclusion that the presynaptic calcium signal reaches levels of 100 muM or higher in the absence of exogenous calcium buffers. The above results suggest that the presynaptic calcium signal for transmitter release has dimensions that are unconventional: very rapid (microseconds), highly localized (nanometers) and exceedingly large (hundreds of micromolar). To detect this signal, the calcium receptor that triggers release must be positioned very close to presynaptic calcium channels and must bind calcium rapidly. Further, since presynaptic calcium levels in the order of 1 muM do not trigger release while levels of hundreds of micromolar are reached during an action potential, this receptor must have a low affinity for calcium. Similar spatially localized 'domains' of calcium action may occur in all cells that produce rapid calcium-dependent events.
引用
收藏
页码:129 / 134
页数:6
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