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Synaptic transmission 1

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Title: Synaptic transmission 1


1
Synaptic transmission 1
2
Synaptic Transmission
  • Expiratory neuron (top trace) and inspiratory
    neuron (bottom trace) were labeled with dye
    during intracellular recording from the
    ventrolateral medulla. Clearly, activity in each
    one of these cells affects activity in the other
    one.

3
Outline
  • A. Electrical synapses
  • B. Overview of chemical synapses
  • C. Synaptic transmission via acetylcholine
  • D. Diversity of chemical synapses
  • E. Norepinephrine/serotonin and depression

4
Synapses
  • Cellular junctions where signals are transmitted
    from neurons to target cells
  • These are communicating junctions
  • Target cells Other neurons, muscle cell, gland
    cells
  • Two types of communicating junctions or synapses
    Electrical synapses via gap junctions, chemical
    synapses involving neurotransmitters

5
Part A Electrical synapses
6
Electrical synapse and gap junctions
  • Recall that this involves channels comprised of
    connexons that link cells

7
Gap junctions
  • A patch where cells are separated by a narrow gap
    of 2-4 nm
  • Connexons, Connexins
  • Each connexon is comprised of six identical
    subunits (connexins)
  • Permeability of junction mediated by conformation
    of the connexons

8
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9
Impulse transmission across synapses
  • Some terminology
  • Presynaptic cell
  • Neuron carrying action potential
  • Postsynaptic cell
  • Target cell receiving signal
  • Transmission of signal can result in a
    depolarization of the postsynaptic cell - an
    excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP),
  • Or hyperpolarization, or simply stabilization, of
    the membrane potential of the postsynaptic cell
    an inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP)

10
Structure of an electrical synapse
11
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12
Impulse transmission across electrical synapses
is almost instantaneous
  • Ions move directly from presynaptic cell to
    postsynaptic cell via gap junctions
  • Transmission occurs in a few microseconds
  • Over a hundred times faster than in chemical
    synapses

13
Transmission of an action potential across an
electrical synapse
14
Under what circumstances are electrical synapses
important?
  • Invertebrate escape responses
  • Also escape responses in vertebrates such as
    goldfish
  • Large number of electrical synapses in fishes
    living at low temperature
  • Can also be used to electrically couple groups of
    cells so they are synchronized

15
Summary
  • Transmission of signals across electrical
    synapses is rapid
  • This involves movement of ions via gap junctions
  • Used when rapid conduction of signals is
    essential or to synchronize cells

16
Part B Overview of chemical synapse
17
Structure of a chemical synapse
18
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19
Chemical synapses
  • Overall
  • Action potential of presynaptic cell causes
    release of neurotransmitter into the synaptic
    cleft
  • Binding of neurotransmitter to postsynaptic cell
    results in a depolarization at excitatory
    synapses (an excitatory postsynaptic potential
    EPSP) or stabilization or hyperpolarization at
    inhibitory synapses (an IPSP).

20
chemical synapse transmission-
21
Step 1
22
Step 2
N Ca channels
23
How vesicle fusion occurs Reserve pool of
vesicles is free in synaptic terminal but these
have to undergo docking and priming to be ready
to release Some vesicles are attached to the
presynaptic membrane by connections between
specific proteins on vesicle and counterparts on
presynaptic membrane- at least 6 different
proteins are believed to be involved. These are
primed. They have joined the reserve pool. To
enter the ready-to-release pool, a primed vesicle
must be docked by becoming associated with n-type
Ca channels at the presynaptic
membrane. Depolarization opens the Ca channels
tiny geysers of Ca occurs at that vesicles
location this Ca causes vesicle fusion
transmitter is released into synaptic cleft.
24
Release of synaptic vesicles
25
Some of the players in (a) docking (b) fusion
preparation and (c) Ca-sensitive exocytosis
26
Freeze-Fracture view of vesicle release
Docking proteins and N-type Ca channels are
visible in the picture at left. In the picture at
right we are looking into the mouths of several
open vesicles.
27
Vesicle Membrane Conservation a kiss-and-run
process - the motor protein dynamin pinches and
the coating protein clathrin forms a cage around
the membrane
28
Toxins and synaptic vesicle fusion
  • Synaptobrevin and SNAP-25 are targets of the
    clostridial neurotoxins tetanus toxin acts in
    the Central Nervous System (CNS) and botulinum
    toxin acts at neuromuscular synapses paralysis
    is caused by blockage of transmitter release.
  • Neurexin is targeted by a-latrotoxin, the black
    widow spider toxin, which induces massive
    transmitter release independent of Ca levels.

29
Step 3
30
Step 4
31
Step 5
32
Transmission of an action potential across
chemical synapse
Most of the synaptic delay (1-2 msec) is due to
the time it takes to organize the presynaptic
processes
33
Part C Transmission via acetylcholine
  • A fairly well-understood example

34
I. Storage of acetylcholine (ACh) in synaptic
vesicles
  • 40 nm diameter membrane bounded vesicles
  • Contain 1000 to 10,000 molecules of acetylcholine
  • A single axon terminus may contain a million or
    more vesicles contacting the target cell at
    several hundred points

35
Anatomy Skeletal Muscle Synapse
36
Synaptic vesicles at a nerve-muscle synapse
37
What neuromuscular synapse anatomy reveals
  • The area of contact at the neuromuscular synapse
    is very extensive.
  • Glia cover the area of the synapse.
  • Highly specialized regions exist in both cells
  • The neurons have the large accumulations of
    synaptic vesicles and associated release system
  • The muscle cell has an accumulation of receptors
    and other response elements that will allow the
    signal to spread over the membrane and within the
    cell.

38
Acetylcholine (ACh) and the neuromuscular synapse
  • In 1921 Otto Loewi showed that ACh was released
    at synapses (and also into the saline) by the
    vagus nerve and transfer of the solution slowed
    the heartbeat of a second frog heart.

39
Acetylcholine
  • ACh is a transmitter that is in a class by
    itself
  • It is synthesized in terminals from acetyl CoA
    and choline by choline acetyltransferase.
  • It is packaged in vesicles in the axon terminals.
  • It can bind to two distinct receptor types
    nicotinic and muscarinic. Nicotinic receptors are
    seen in the skeletal muscle synapse and at
    synapses within the CNS. Muscarinic receptors
    for ACh are also seen in the CNS and at
    parasympathetic synapses on target tissues.
  • After release, ACh is degraded by the enzyme
    acetylcholinesterase into acetate and choline.
  • The choline is taken back into the terminal by
    Na-driven facilitated uptake.

40
Recycling is always good!
41
Synthesis of acetylcholine
  • Takes place in cytosol of axon terminals

42
Accumulation of acetylcholine in synaptic vesicles
  • Involves active transport

Vacuolar-type HATPase
43
Accumulation of acetylcholine
  • V type ATPase in vesicle membrane is used to
    reduce vesicle pH
  • Low vesicle pH powers a proton/neurotransmitter
    (NT) antiporter
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