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Estimates for the pool size of releasable quanta at a single central synapse and for the time required to refill the pool.
374
Citations
11
References
1995
Year
Synaptic TransmissionNeurotransmissionCellular NeurobiologySocial SciencesSingle Central SynapseAvailable QuantaLocal SuperfusionNeurodynamicsNeurologyNeurochemistryBiophysicsNervous SystemReleasable QuantaSynaptic PlasticityNeurophysiologyComputational NeurosciencePhysiologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemInitial Release RateMedicinePool Size
Local superfusion of limited dendritic areas with hypertonic or hyperkalemic solutions stimulates the release of quanta from a small population of synapses made on rodent hippocampal neurons maintained in primary culture, and each quantal event can be detected in the postsynaptic neuron. With maintained stimulation, the initial release rate is about 20 quanta per sec per synapse, and this rate declines exponentially to a final low level. These observations can be interpreted as depletion of available quanta and, with this interpretation, a bouton would contain one to two dozen quanta in its readily releasable pool. Tests with a second application of the solution that produces release reveal that the pool of readily releasable quanta is replenished with a time constant of about 10 sec (36 degrees C). The pool of quanta defined in this way may correspond to the population of vesicles docked at the bouton's active zone.
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