The Munc13 gene family encodes molecules located at the synaptic active zone that regulate the reliability of synapses to encode information over a wide range of frequencies in response to action potentials. In the CNS, proteins of the Munc13 family are critical in regulating neurotransmitter release and synaptic plasticity. Although Munc13-1 is essential for synaptic transmission, it is paradoxical that Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 are functionally dispensable at some synapses, although their loss in other synapses leads to increases in frequency-dependent facilitation. We addressed this issue at the calyx of Held synapse, a giant glutamatergic synapse that we found to express all these Munc13 isoforms. We studied their roles in the regulation of synaptic transmission and their impact on the reliability of information transfer. Through detailed electrophysiological analyses of Munc13-2, Munc13-3, and Munc13-2-3 knock-out and wild-type mice, we report that the combined loss of Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 led to an increase in the rate of calcium-dependent recovery and a change in kinetics of release of the readily releasable pool. Furthermore, viral-mediated overexpression of a dominant-negative form of Munc13-1 at the calyx demonstrated that these effects are Munc13-1 dependent. Quantitative immunohistochemistry using Munc13-fluorescent protein knock-in mice revealed that Munc13-1 is the most highly expressed Munc13 isoform at the calyx and the only one highly colocalized with Bassoon at the active zone. Based on these data, we conclude that Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 isoforms limit the ability of Munc13-1 to regulate calcium-dependent replenishment of readily releasable pool and slow pool to fast pool conversion in central synapses.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5128-12.2013 | DOI Listing |
J Neurosci
May 2013
School of Life Science and Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei 430074, China.
The Munc13 gene family encodes molecules located at the synaptic active zone that regulate the reliability of synapses to encode information over a wide range of frequencies in response to action potentials. In the CNS, proteins of the Munc13 family are critical in regulating neurotransmitter release and synaptic plasticity. Although Munc13-1 is essential for synaptic transmission, it is paradoxical that Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 are functionally dispensable at some synapses, although their loss in other synapses leads to increases in frequency-dependent facilitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Immunol
April 2008
Department of Biochemistry, Institute of Health Biosciences, University of Tokushima Graduate School, Tokushima, Japan.
The Doc2 family comprises the brain-specific Doc2alpha and the ubiquitous Doc2beta and Doc2gamma. With the exception of Doc2gamma, these proteins exhibit Ca(2+)-dependent phospholipid-binding activity in their Ca(2+)-binding C2A domain and are thought to be important for Ca(2+)-dependent regulated exocytosis. In excitatory neurons, Doc2alpha interacts with Munc13-1, a member of the Munc13 family, through its N-terminal Munc13-1-interacting domain and the Doc2alpha-Munc13-1 system is implicated in Ca(2+)-dependent synaptic vesicle exocytosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol
August 2004
7804 Medical Sciences II Building, Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, The Medical School, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0622, USA.
The formation and dissolution of SNARE protein complexes is essential for Ca(2+)-triggered fusion of neurotransmitter-filled vesicles at the presynaptic membrane. Among the pre-synaptic SNARE proteins, the activation of the Q-SNARE syntaxin1A is a critical event for SNARE complex formation. Activation requires syntaxin1A to transit from a munc18-bound non-interacting state to one competent for SNARE binding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurosci
October 2002
Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, Kentucky 40202, USA.
The first several months of life are a critical period for neuronal plasticity in the visual cortex during which anatomic and physiological development depends on visual experience. In cats, electrophysiologically assessed neuronal plasticity is minimal until approximately 3 weeks, peaks at 5 weeks, gradually declines to low levels at 20 weeks, and disappears at approximately 1 year of age (Daw, 1994). Rearing in darkness slows the entire time course of this critical period, such that at 5 weeks of age, normal cats are more plastic than dark-reared cats, whereas at 20 weeks, dark-reared cats are more plastic (Mower, 1991; Beaver et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem J
July 2000
Max-Planck-Institut für experimentelle Medizin, AG Molekulare Neurobiologie, Hermann-Rein-Str. 3, D-37075 Göttingen, Germany.
Munc13 proteins constitute a family of three highly homologous molecules (Munc13-1, Munc13-2 and Munc13-3). With the exception of a ubiquitously expressed Munc13-2 splice variant, Munc13 proteins are brain-specific. Munc13-1 has a central priming function in synaptic vesicle exocytosis from glutamatergic synapses.
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