Publication | Open Access
Distinct nanoscale calcium channel and synaptic vesicle topographies contribute to the diversity of synaptic function
21
Citations
82
References
2018
Year
Unknown Venue
Synaptic TransmissionNeurotransmitterNeurotransmissionWeak Synapses VgccsSynaptic SignalingSensory SystemsCellular PhysiologySynaptic FunctionSocial SciencesCellular NeurobiologyVgcc ClustersHyperpolarization (Biology)Synaptic NeuroscienceDocked VesiclesBiophysicsMolecular NeuroscienceMolecular PhysiologyIon ChannelsMembrane BiologyNervous SystemCell BiologySynaptic Vesicle TopographiesSynaptic PlasticityNeurophysiologyCellular NeuroscienceNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyMedicine
SUMMARY The nanoscale topographical arrangement of voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCC) and synaptic vesicles (SVs) determines synaptic strength and plasticity, but whether distinct spatial distributions underpin diversity of synaptic function is unknown. We performed single bouton Ca 2+ imaging, Ca 2+ chelator competition, immunogold electron microscopic (EM) localization of VGCCs and the active zone (AZ) protein Munc13-1, at two cerebellar synapses. Unexpectedly, we found that weak synapses exhibited 3-fold more VGCCs than strong synapses, while the coupling distance was 5-fold longer. Reaction-diffusion modelling could explain both functional and structural data with two strikingly different nanotopographical motifs: strong synapses are composed of SVs that are tightly coupled (∼10 nm) to VGCC clusters, whereas at weak synapses VGCCs were excluded from the vicinity (∼50 nm) of docked vesicles. The distinct VGCC-SV topographical motifs also confer differential sensitivity to neuromodulation. Thus VGCC-SV arrangements are not canonical across CNS synapses and their diversity could underlie functional heterogeneity.
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