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Similar Intracellular Ca2+Requirements for Inactivation and Facilitation of Voltage-Gated Ca2+Channels in a Glutamatergic Mammalian Nerve Terminal

Authors :
Emilio Erazo-Fischer
Holger Taschenberger
Kun-Han Lin
Source :
The Journal of Neuroscience. 32:1261-1272
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Society for Neuroscience, 2012.

Abstract

Voltage-gated Ca2+channels (VGCCs) of the P/Q-type, which are expressed at a majority of mammalian nerve terminals, show two types of Ca2+-dependent feedback regulation—inactivation (CDI) and facilitation (CDF). Because of the nonlinear relationship between Ca2+influx and transmitter release, CDI and CDF are powerful regulators of synaptic strength. To what extent VGCCs inactivate or facilitate during spike trains depends on the dynamics of free Ca2+([Ca2+]i) and the Ca2+sensitivity of CDI and CDF, which has not been determined in nerve terminals. In this report, we took advantage of the large size of a rat auditory glutamatergic synapse—the calyx of Held—and combined voltage-clamp recordings of presynaptic Ca2+currents (ICa(V)) with UV-light flash-induced Ca2+uncaging and presynaptic Ca2+imaging to study the Ca2+requirements for CDI and CDF.We find that nearly half of the presynaptic VGCCs inactivate during 100 ms voltage steps and require several seconds to recover. This inactivation is caused neither by depletion of Ca2+ions from the synaptic cleft nor by metabotropic feedback inhibition, because it is resistant to blockade of metabotropic and ionotropic glutamate receptors. Facilitation ofICa(V)induced by repetitive depolarizations or preconditioning voltage steps decays within tens of milliseconds. Since Ca2+buffers only weakly affect CDI and CDF, we conclude that the Ca2+sensors are closely associated with the channel. CDI and CDF can be induced by intracellular photo release of Ca2+resulting in [Ca2+]ielevations in the low micromolar range, implying a surprisingly high affinity of the Ca2+sensors.

Details

ISSN :
15292401 and 02706474
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Neuroscience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d2c657e85a4fe579ef4205cc3159ab07
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.3838-11.2012