Publication | Open Access
ISOLATION AND STRUCTURAL STUDIES ON SYNAPTIC COMPLEXES FROM RAT BRAIN
267
Citations
18
References
1972
Year
High ConcentrationsSynaptic TransmissionNeurotransmitterMolecular BiologyNeurotransmissionSynaptic SignalingStructural IntegrityProtein FoldingNeurologyNeurochemistryBiochemistryNervous SystemSynaptic IntegrationSynaptic PlasticityNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNatural SciencesPsd StructureNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyMedicine
Synaptic complexes were isolated from rat brain. The isolated complexes consist of pre‑ and postsynaptic membranes joined by a synaptic cleft with a postsynaptic density (PSD) on the inner membrane surface; the PSD is resistant to NaCl, EGTA, and low‑urea but is partially dissociated by high‑urea, indicating that polypeptides are major structural components whose integrity is essential for PSD stability.
A fraction enriched in synaptic complexes has been isolated from rat brain. The major structural elements of synaptic complexes after isolation are a sector of pre- and postsynaptic plasma membranes joined together by a synaptic cleft and a postsynaptic density (PSD) located on the inner surface of the postsynaptic membrane. On its outer surface, the postsynaptic membrane has a series of projections which extend about halfway into the cleft and which occur along the entire length of the PSD. Proteolytic enzymes at high concentrations remove the PSD and open the synaptic cleft; at low concentrations the PSD is selectively destroyed. By contrast, the structural integrity of the PSD is resistant to treatment with NaCl, EGTA, and low concentrations of urea. Pre- and postsynaptic membranes also remain joined by the synaptic cleft after NaCl, EGTA, or mild urea treatment. High concentrations of urea cause the partial dissociation of the PSD. We conclude that polypeptides are probably one of the major components of the PSD and that the structural integrity of the PSD depends on polypeptides because disruption of the covalent or hydrophobic bonding of these polypeptides leads to a progressive loss of PSD structure.
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