AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the role of calcium-activated potassium conductance (gK(Ca)) in transmitter release at the crayfish neuromuscular junction by measuring both presynaptic membrane potential and postsynaptic transmitter release.
  • Blocking gK(Ca) with tetraethylammonium ion (TEA) modified the relationship between presynaptic potential and transmitter release, leading to enhanced release at less depolarized potentials.
  • The research indicates that the facilitation of transmitter release is influenced not only by the amplitude of depolarizing pulses but also by the activation of gK(Ca), which mediates the decay of facilitation following conditioning pulses.

Article Abstract

Membrane potential was recorded intracellularly near presynaptic terminals of the excitor axon of the crayfish opener neuromuscular junction (NMJ), while transmitter release was recorded postsynaptically. This study focused on the effects of a presynaptic calcium-activated potassium conductance, gK(Ca), on the transmitter release evoked by single and paired depolarizing current pulses. Blocking gK(Ca) by adding tetraethylammonium ion (TEA; 5-20 mM) to a solution containing tetrodotoxin and aminopyridines caused the relation between presynaptic potential and transmitter release to steepen and shift to less depolarized potentials. When two depolarizing current pulses were applied at 20-ms intervals with gK(Ca) not blocked, the presynaptic voltage change to the second (test) pulse was inversely related to the amplitude of the first (conditioning) pulse. This effect of the conditioning prepulse on the response to the test pulse was eliminated by 20 mM TEA and by solutions containing 0 mM Ca2+/1 mM EGTA, suggesting that the reduction in the amplitude of the test pulse was due to activation of gK(Ca) by calcium remaining from the conditioning pulse. In the absence of TEA, facilitation of transmitter release evoked by a test pulse increased as the conditioning pulse grew from -40 to -20 mV, but then decreased with further increase in the conditioning depolarization. A similar nonmonotonic relationship between facilitation and the amplitude of the conditioning depolarization was reported in previous studies using extracellular recording, and interpreted as supporting an additional voltage-dependent step in the activation of transmitter release. We suggest that this result was due instead to activation of a gK(Ca) by the conditioning depolarization, since facilitation of transmitter release increased monotonically with the amplitude of the conditioning depolarization, and the early time course of the decay of facilitation was prolonged when gK(Ca) was blocked. The different time courses for decay of the presynaptic potential (20 ms) and facilitation (greater than 50 ms) suggest either that residual free calcium does not account for facilitation at the crayfish NMJ or that the transmitter release mechanism has a markedly higher affinity or stoichiometry for internal free calcium than does gK(Ca). Finally, our data suggest that the calcium channels responsible for transmitter release at the crayfish NMJ are not of the L, N, or T type.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229071PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1085/jgp.98.6.1181DOI Listing

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