| Literature DB >> 30823359 |
Igor I Krivoi1, Alexey M Petrov2,3.
Abstract
A present review is devoted to the analysis of literature data and results of own research. Skeletal muscle neuromuscular junction is specialized to trigger the striated muscle fiber contraction in response to motor neuron activity. The safety factor at the neuromuscular junction strongly depends on a variety of pre- and postsynaptic factors. The review focuses on the crucial role of membrane cholesterol to maintain a high efficiency of neuromuscular transmission. Cholesterol metabolism in the neuromuscular junction, its role in the synaptic vesicle cycle and neurotransmitter release, endplate electrogenesis, as well as contribution of cholesterol to the synaptogenesis, synaptic integrity, and motor disorders are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Na,K-ATPase; cholesterol and lipid rafts; neuromuscular transmission; nicotinic acetylcholine receptor; oxysterols; quantal release; safety factor; skeletal muscle; synaptic vesicle cycle
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30823359 PMCID: PMC6429197 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20051046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Putative role of cholesterol in presynaptic processes. Cholesterol organizes microdomains in presynaptic membrane and SVs. Several proteins, essential for presynaptic function, reside in these microdomains, and/or directly bind with cholesterol. These interactions are involved in control of multiple aspects of SV cycle that guarantees the maintenance of neurotransmitter release. Additionally, numerous presynaptic G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) and signaling enzymes (e.g., protein kinases and small GTPases), as well as a ROS-generating enzyme (NADPH oxidase), which regulates the steps of the SV cycle, could be located in cholesterol-rich microdomains. SV exocytosis occurs due to fusion of SVs from ready-releasable pool (RRP) with presynaptic membrane in AZ region. Under condition of moderate motor nerve activity, replenishment of RRP is mediated by delivery of SVs from recycling pool. After exocytosis, these SVs are able to rapidly recover through fast endocytotic mechanism, refill with ACh (green circles), and repeatedly participate in neurotransmitter release. Intense activation of motor neuron can led to mobilization of SVs from resting (reserve) pool to the exocytotic sites. After massive exocytosis, the resting pool is replenished by mainly slow endocytotic route (bulk endocytosis) associated with formation of endosome-like structures in NMJs. The cytoskeleton can contribute to spatial organization of both SV pools and routes for SV traffic. Key events, where the presence of cholesterol is required, are SV exocytosis (fusion pore formation, Ca2+ triggering step), endocytosis (vesicular protein holding in cluster), SV refilling with ACh (formation of proton gradient, exchange ACh and proton), SV clusterization (SV interconnections by synapsins), limitation of ACh leakage via spontaneous (clamping of signaling enzymes activity and ROS production), and nonquantal (decrease in activity of vesicular ACh transporter and H+-pump in presynaptic membrane) secretion. Please, for details, see Section 3 and Section 5.
Some potential interactions between cholesterol and proteins involved in regulation of neurotransmitter release from motor nerve terminals.
| Protein | Role in Neuromuscular Transmission | Potential Role of Interaction with Cholesterol | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| P2Y12 receptor | Inhibition of ACh release | Acceleration of the downstream receptor signaling | [ |
| Ca2+ channels (N, L, P/Q types) | Triggering SV exocytosis in response to AP | Clusterization of channels near exocytotic sites, thereby facilitating exocytosis | [ |
| NADPH oxidase (ROS generating enzyme) | Regulation of AP-evoked and spontaneous ACh release | Limitation of background activity | [ |
| Proton pump | Formation of H+ gradient necessary for SV filling with ACh; regulation of SV size | Regulation of precise location and potentiation of H+ transport function | [ |
| Signaling enzymes (protein kinases A/C) | Control of neurotransmitter release | Limitation of background activity of the protein kinases | [ |
| Synapsin | Clusterization of SVs in pools | Lipid raft organization in SV membranes | [ |
| Synaptophysin | Regulation of exo- and endocytosis | Induction of SV curvature during endocytosis | [ |
| Synaptotagmin 1 | A major Ca2+ sensor for neurotransmitter release | Location in lipid rafts and precise distribution in presynaptic membrane | [ |
| Syntaxin | Component of SNARE complex mediated SV fusion | Clusterization in membrane; activity-dependent redistribution in lipid rafts | [ |
| Vesicular ACh transporter | Uptake of ACh into SV, nonvesicular ACh release | Precise location in SV membranes and regulation of activity | [ |
Figure 2Cholesterol as a part of nAChR/α2Na,K-ATPase multimolecular regulatory complex. (A) The nAChRs and lipid rafts reside at the endplate region. A single endplate of rat soleus muscle was dual-labeled with α-BTX (nAChRs, red channel) and fluorescent cholera toxin B subunit to stain lipid rafts (CTxB, green channel). Overlap (orange channel). (B) The nAChR and the α2 Na,K-ATPase colocalization at the muscle endplate. A single endplate of mouse extensor digitorum longus muscle was dual-labeled with α-BTX (nAChRs, red channel) and BODIPY-conjugated ouabain (α2 Na,K-ATPase, green channel). Overlap (orange channel). Scale bars, 10 μm. (C) Hypothetical scheme of nAChR/α2Na,K-ATPase/Caveolin-3/Cholesterol interactions stimulating electrogenic active transport to hyperpolarize the resting membrane potential (RMP). Modified from Petrov et al. (2017) ref. [120] (A) and Heiny et al. (2010) ref. [100] (B).
Figure 3Key pre- and postsynaptic points that cross-talked with plasma membrane cholesterol and are responsible for the safety factor at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ).