| Literature DB >> 25071469 |
Menahem Segal1, Eduard Korkotian1.
Abstract
Despite decades of research, the role of calcium stores in dendritic spines structure, function and plasticity is still debated. The reasons for this may have to do with the multitude of overlapping calcium handling machineries in the neuron, including stores, voltage and ligand gated channels, pumps and transporters. Also, different cells in the brain are endowed with calcium stores that are activated by different receptor types, and their differential compartmentalization in dendrites, spines and presynaptic terminals complicates their analysis. In the present review we address several key issues, including the role of calcium stores in synaptic plasticity, their role during development, in stress and in neurodegenerative diseases. Apparently, there is increasing evidence for a crucial role of calcium stores, especially of the ryanodine species, in synaptic plasticity and neuronal survival.Entities:
Keywords: IP3 receptors; Orai; STIM; dendritic spines; ryanodine receptors
Year: 2014 PMID: 25071469 PMCID: PMC4089118 DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2014.00064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
Figure 1Transient rise of [Ca. DsRed-transfected cells were loaded with a calcium indicator Fluo-4, and with the caged EGTA, the flash was focused on different dendritic spines in the field of view, and the transient elevation of [Ca2+] was recorded using line scan mode across the spine head and parent dendrite. The culture was then exposed to thapsigargin, and the same spines were imaged again. Following the experiment, cultures were fixed and immunostained for SP. Comparisons were made between SP-containing (right arrowhead) and SP-lacking spines (left arrowhead). For each sample (n = 9 spines), the transient rise of [Ca2+] in both the spine head (blue) and parent dendrite (green) were plotted, before (continuous line) and after thapsigargin (dotted line). A secondary “hump” in the transient rise of [Ca2+]i was seen only in the SP(+) spines but not in the SP(−) ones. This hump was erased in the presence of thapsigargin (after). Scale in image, 1 μm, ordinate is the averaged transients (df/f). (modified from Korkotian and Segal, 2011).
Figure 2Colocalization of STIM1 and Orai1 (top) and RyR3 and SP (bottom) in cultured hippocampal neurons. Cells were transfected with DsRed to image morphology (blue) and subsequently immunostained for STIM1 (red, top) and Orai1(green), or RyR (red) and SP (green, bottom). Scale 1 μm for both images. Colocalization of STIM and Orai are obvious in some but not all spines, such that either both or none were immunostained in the dendritic spines. Similarly, RyR and SP were colocalized in some but not all dendritic spines.