Literature DB >> 11896161

Endosomal compartments serve multiple hippocampal dendritic spines from a widespread rather than a local store of recycling membrane.

James R Cooney1, Jamie L Hurlburt, David K Selig, Kristen M Harris, John C Fiala.   

Abstract

Endosomes are essential to dendritic and synaptic function in sorting membrane proteins for degradation or recycling, yet little is known about their locations near synapses. Here, serial electron microscopy was used to ascertain the morphology and distribution of all membranous intracellular compartments in distal dendrites of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons in juvenile and adult rats. First, the continuous network of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) was traced throughout dendritic segments and their spines. SER occupied the cortex of the dendritic shaft and extended into 14% of spines. Several types of non-SER compartments were then identified, including clathrin-coated vesicles and pits, large uncoated vesicles, tubular compartments, multivesicular bodies (MVBs), and MVB-tubule complexes. The uptake of extracellular gold particles indicated that these compartments were endosomal in origin. Small, round vesicles and pits that did not contain gold were also identified. The tubular compartments exhibited clathrin-coated tips consistent with the genesis of these small, presumably exosomal vesicles. Approximately 70% of the non-SER compartments were located within or at the base of dendritic spines. Overall, only 29% of dendritic spines had endosomal compartments, whereas 20% contained small vesicles. Small vesicles did not colocalize in spines with endosomes or SER. Three-dimensional reconstructions revealed that up to 20 spines shared a recycling pool of plasmalemmal proteins rather than maintaining independent stores at each spine.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11896161      PMCID: PMC6758269     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  58 in total

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9.  Freeze-fracture studies of the developing cell surface. II. Particle-free membrane blisters on glutaraldehyde-fixed corneal fibroblasts are artefacts.

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  104 in total

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Review 6.  Ultrastructure of synapses in the mammalian brain.

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Review 7.  The role of endosomal-recycling in long-term potentiation.

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Review 8.  Multivesicular bodies in neurons: distribution, protein content, and trafficking functions.

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Review 9.  Plasticity of dendritic spines: subcompartmentalization of signaling.

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Review 10.  Primary cilia and dendritic spines: different but similar signaling compartments.

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