1. Rab3 superprimes synaptic vesicles for release: implications for short-term synaptic plasticity.
- Author
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Schlüter OM, Basu J, Südhof TC, and Rosenmund C
- Subjects
- Animals, Cadmium pharmacology, Calcium pharmacology, Calcium Signaling, Cells, Cultured, Evoked Potentials physiology, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Time Factors, rab3 GTP-Binding Proteins deficiency, rab3 GTP-Binding Proteins genetics, rab3A GTP-Binding Protein deficiency, rab3A GTP-Binding Protein genetics, Hippocampus cytology, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Neurons metabolism, Synaptic Transmission physiology, Synaptic Vesicles metabolism, rab3 GTP-Binding Proteins physiology, rab3A GTP-Binding Protein physiology
- Abstract
Presynaptic vesicle trafficking and priming are important steps in regulating synaptic transmission and plasticity. The four closely related small GTP-binding proteins Rab3A, Rab3B, Rab3C, and Rab3D are believed to be important for these steps. In mice, the complete absence of all Rab3s leads to perinatal lethality accompanied by a 30% reduction of probability of Ca2+-triggered synaptic release. This study examines the role of Rab3 during Ca2+-triggered release in more detail and identifies its impact on short-term plasticity. Using patch-clamp electrophysiology of autaptic neuronal cultures from Rab3-deficient mouse hippocampus, we show that excitatory Rab3-deficient neurons display unique time- and frequency-dependent short-term plasticity characteristics in response to spike trains. Analysis of vesicle release and repriming kinetics as well as Ca2+ sensitivity of release indicate that Rab3 acts on a subset of primed, fusion competent vesicles. They lower the amount of Ca2+ required for action potential-triggered release, which leads to a boosting of release probability, but their action also introduces a significant delay in the supply of these modified vesicles. As a result, Rab3-induced modifications to primed vesicles causes a transient increase in the transduction efficacy of synaptic action potential trains and optimizes the encoding of synaptic information at an intermediate spike frequency range.
- Published
- 2006
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