Literature DB >> 22930264

Paired-pulse facilitation of multivesicular release and intersynaptic spillover of glutamate at rat cerebellar granule cell-interneurone synapses.

Shin'ichiro Satake1, Tsuyoshi Inoue, Keiji Imoto.   

Abstract

A simple form of presynaptic plasticity, paired-pulse facilitation (PPF), has been explained as a transient increase in the probability of vesicular release. Using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique to record synaptic activity in rat cerebellar slices, we found different forms of presynaptically originated short-term plasticity during glutamatergic excitatory neurotransmission from granule cells (GCs) to molecular-layer interneurones (INs). Paired-pulse activation of GC axons at short intervals (30-100 ms) elicited not only a facilitation in the peak amplitude (PPF(amp)), but also a prolongation in the decay-time constant (PPP(decay)) of the EPSCs recorded from INs. The results of pharmacological tests and kinetics analyses suggest that the mechanisms underlying the respective types of short-term plasticity were different. PPF(amp) was elicited by a transient increase in the number of released vesicles. On the other hand, PPP(decay) was caused not only by delayed release as has been reported but also by extrasynaptic spillover of the GC transmitter and the subsequent intersynaptic pooling. Both PPF(amp) and PPP(decay) closely rely on repetitive-activation-induced multivesicular release. Using a dynamic clamp technique, we further examined the physiological significance of different presynaptic plasticity, and found that PPF(amp) and PPP(decay) can differentially encode and process neuronal information by influencing the total synaptic charge transferred to postsynaptic INs to reflect activation frequency of the presynaptic GCs.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22930264      PMCID: PMC3528983          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2012.234070

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  51 in total

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Authors:  J S Diamond; C E Jahr
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  11 in total

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8.  High frequency burst firing of granule cells ensures transmission at the parallel fiber to purkinje cell synapse at the cost of temporal coding.

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9.  A Model of In vitro Plasticity at the Parallel Fiber-Molecular Layer Interneuron Synapses.

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10.  Two-component latency distributions indicate two-step vesicular release at simple glutamatergic synapses.

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