| Literature DB >> 32396366 |
Paula K Zhu1,2,3, W Sharon Zheng, Peng Zhang, Miao Jing1,4, Philip M Borden5, Farhan Ali6, Kaiming Guo7, Jiesi Feng1, Jonathan S Marvin5, Yali Wang, Jinxia Wan1, Li Gan8, Alex C Kwan6, Li Lin7, Loren L Looger5, Yulong Li1, Yajun Zhang1.
Abstract
How neuromodulatory transmitters diffuse into the extracellular space remains an unsolved fundamental biological question, despite wide acceptance of the volume transmission model. Here, we report development of a method combining genetically encoded fluorescent sensors with high-resolution imaging and analysis algorithms which permits the first direct visualization of neuromodulatory transmitter diffusion at various neuronal and non-neuronal cells. Our analysis reveals that acetylcholine and monoamines diffuse at individual release sites with a spread length constant of ∼0.75 μm. These transmitters employ varied numbers of release sites, and when spatially close-packed release sites coactivate they can spillover into larger subcellular areas. Our data indicate spatially restricted (i.e., nonvolume) neuromodulatory transmission to be a prominent intercellular communication mode, reshaping current thinking of control and precision of neuromodulation crucial for understanding behaviors and diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Acetylcholine; deconvolution microscopy; genetically encoded fluorescent sensor; norepinephrine; synaptic transmission; volume transmission
Year: 2020 PMID: 32396366 PMCID: PMC7519949 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189