Title: Synaptic Transmission and Cellular Signaling: an Overview
1Synaptic Transmission and Cellular Signaling
an Overview
- Department of Pharmacology
- Jin-Chung Chen, Ph.D.
- Room 664 x 5282
2Synaptic Transmission historic view
- 1. Histologist Golgi and Ramon Cajal neuronal
connection via Synapse - 2. Oliver, Shafer, Langley and Elliot (1890)
Chemical transmission - 3. Experimental biology by Otto Loewi electrical
stimulation on vagus n. decrease heart
contraction
3Criteria for chemical transmission
- 1. Synthesis of the neurotransmitter in the
presynaptic nerve terminals - 2. Storage of the neurotransmitter in secretory
vesicles. - 3. Regulated release of neurotransmitter in the
synaptic space between the pre- and post-synaptic
neurons. - 4. Presence of receptors on the postsynaptic
membrane mimics the effect of nerve stimulation - 5. A means for termination of the action of the
released neurotransmitter.
4Eukaryotic neurotransmitter release
- 1. Classic neurotransmitter ACh, DA, NE, EPI and
5-HT are low-molecular-weight substance that have
no other physiological function - 2. They store in synaptic vesicles acidic
interior (pH 5.5), maintained by a
vacuolar-type, proton-translocating ATPase driven
by H pump and specific vesicular transporter
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6 3. Peptides and proteins can also be released
from the n. terminals. They utilize the ER, Golgi
and trans-Golgi network in the cell body (not the
terminal) and transport into the nerve terminal
by axonal transprot.
4. Constitutive secretion and endocytosis in
yeast and mammalian cells are similar in
presynaptic events of synaptic transmission
7Methods to study exocytosis
- 1. Membrane capacity (Cm)
- Cm QAm/V (Q is the charge across the
membrane) - specific capacitance is mainly determined by
the thickness and dielectric constant of the
phospholipid bilayer. Therefore, the increase in
plasma membrane area due to exocytosis is
proportional to the increase in Cm. - Patch clamp micropipet has tight seal to allow
low noise, high sensitivity, electric measurement
8Electrochemical amperometric
Electrophysiological capacity
9- 2. Electrochemical detection (carbon fiber
amperometric electrode) directly measure the
release of oxidizable neurotransmitter, such as
catecholamines and serotonin. - 3. Synaptosome homogenize brain tissues to shear
off the nerve terminals. Each of the synaptosome
is about 0.5 1.0 ?m in diameter, contains
hundreds of synaptic vesicles, trace mitochondria
and postsynaptic membrane. It can function for
several hours.
10Synaptosomal preparation
Superfusion apparatus
114. Tissue culture adrenal medullary chromaffin
cells have the same precursor cells as
postganglionic sympathetic neurons 5. Cell
culture collagenase digestion of bovine adrenal
glands or using PC12 cells to study the
neurochemical nature of neurotransmitter release.
12Neuromuscular junction ACh release and
postsynaptic effect
- 1. There are approximately 300 active zones per
NMJ 500,000 vesicles in all of the active zones
at one NMJ. It is estimated a vesicle contains
20,000 ACh molecules. - 2. The specialized postsynaptic membrane
structure consists a high density of nicotinic
ACh receptors (nAChRs) - 3. Basal lamina matrix proteins are important for
the formation and maintenance of the NMJ and are
concentrated in the cleft enriched with AChE.
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15Quantum release mechanism of release as
Exocytosis
- Fatt and Katz (1952) observed motor neuron
stimulation results in spontaneous potentials of
approximately 1 mV at the motor end plate
(miniature end-plate potentials MEPPs). - Measurement of quantum release amplitude fixed
but number variated.
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17Calcium is necessary for transmission at the NMJ
and other synapses
- 1. In most cases in the CNS and PNS, chemical
transmission does not occur unless Ca2 is
present. - 2. EPPs could not be elicited if the calcium
pulse immediately followed the depolarization
but should be beforehand (pulse as short as 1
msec preceded the depolarization). - 3. Extracellular calcium 2 mM vs. intracellular
0.1 ?M the requirement to activate calcium
channels 50-100 ?M. - 4. Origin of calcium could be extracellular (thru
voltage-dependent Ca2 channel) or intracellular
GPCR-coupled PI-PLC activation release IP3, thus
Ca2 release from ER
18Top trace illustrates the postsynaptic membrane
potential
19Pre-synaptic event and time scale
- 1. The time between calcium influx and exocytosis
in the n. terminal is very short (0.5 -1.0 msec
at NMJ 200 ?sec at squid axon 60 ?sec in CNS
neuron) - 2. In such short time (due to docking and fusion
of synaptic vesicle), synaptic vesicle can not
move significantly (calcium diffuse only 850 Ã…) - 3. The supply of synaptic vesicles in the
terminal in limited. Rapid recycled from the
synaptic membrane with plasma membrane via
clathrin-mediated endocytosis is essential
(endocytosis is occurred away from active zones).
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21Calcium-dependent proteins are required for
vesicle docking
22The use of fluorescent dye FM1-43 to label the
membrane and visualize endocytosis and exocytosis
at the NMJ 1. Complete cycle of exocytosis and
endocytosis app. 1 min 2. A single n. impulse
release 0.1 of the recycling pool. 3.
Endocytosis follows app. 20 sec. after exocytosis.
23Endocytosis and clathrin cage
24Fast synaptic transmission vs. peptide/protein
release at the nerve terminals
- 1. Fast transmission catecholamines, amino acid
transmitters can be synthesized within the n.
terminals (synaptic vesicle) or transported
rapidly across the membrane (uptake carrier). - 2. In contrast, peptide/protein are inserted in
the secretory granules, then transport down to n.
terminals (no carrier) - 3. Peptidergic granules are far less numbers than
vesicles involved in fast exocytosis and are not
localized at active zone (maybe function to
maintain the long-lasting effect on postsynaptic
neuron)
25Function of ATP in presynaptic secretion ?
- 1. ATP usually is released along with transmitter
in the vesicle and important in maintaining the
exocytosis mechanism. - 2. ATP is necessary for the function of NSF (an
ATPase) to dissociate complexes of the SNARE
protein VAMP. - 3. Maintain PIP2 and PIP by phosphorylation of
phosphatidylinositol 4-kinaes and PIP kinase
(PIP2 binds to synaptotagmin and rabphilin 3a and
regulate cytoskeleton profilin, gelsolin,
scinderin and myosin).
26Cellular signaling mechanisms
- Langley (1900s) noted the high specificity and
potency of biological response and postulated the
existence of receptor or acceptor. - Three phases of receptor-mediated signaling
- 1. Polar molecule forms a complex with
cell-surface receptor - 2. Activated receptor-ligand complex elicits an
increase of 2nd messenger, or channel open/close - 3. Signal cascades
27Cell-surface receptors utilize four distinct
molecular mechanisms for transmembrane signaling
28Signal transduction cascade mediated by GPCR
(G-protein coupled receptor)
29Signal transduction cascade mediated by RTK
(receptor tyrosine kinase)
30Cross-talk between GPCR, ligand-gated ion
channels and receptor tyrosine kinase