Publication | Closed Access
Absence of Junctional Glutamate Receptor Clusters in <i>Drosophila</i> Mutants Lacking Spontaneous Transmitter Release
114
Citations
24
References
2001
Year
Synaptic TransmissionGeneticsNeurotransmitterReceptor ClusteringNeurotransmissionCellular NeurobiologySynaptic SignalingGlutamate ReceptorsSocial SciencesMolecular NeuroscienceMolecular PhysiologyNervous SystemBiologySynaptic PlasticityDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceAction PotentialsCentral Nervous SystemMolecular NeurobiologyMedicine
Little is known about the functional significance of spontaneous miniature synaptic potentials, which are the result of vesicular exocytosis at nerve terminals. Here, by using Drosophila mutants with specific defects in presynaptic function, we found that glutamate receptors clustered normally at neuromuscular junctions of mutants that retained spontaneous transmitter secretion but had lost the ability to release transmitter in response to action potentials. In contrast, receptor clustering was defective in mutants in which both spontaneous and evoked vesicle exocytosis were absent. Thus, spontaneous vesicle exocytosis appears to be tightly linked to the clustering of glutamate receptors during development.
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