Literature DB >> 9276500

Exocytotic release from neuronal cell bodies, dendrites and nerve terminals in sympathetic ganglia of the rat, and its differential regulation.

Z F Zaidi1, M R Matthews.   

Abstract

Stimulant-induced exocytosis has been demonstrated in sympathetic ganglia of the rat by in vitro incubation of excised ganglia in the presence of tannic acid, which stabilizes vesicle cores after their exocytotic release. Sites of exocytosis were observed along non-synaptic regions of the surfaces of neuron somata and dendrites, including regions of dendrosomatic and dendrodendritic apposition, as well as along the surfaces of nerve terminals About half the exocytoses associated with nerve terminals were parasynaptic or synaptic, and these appeared mostly to arise from the presynaptic terminal, but occasionally from the postsynaptic element. The results demonstrated that the neurons of sympathetic ganglia release materials intraganglionically in response to stimulation, that release from different parts of the neuron is subject to independent regulation, at least via cholinergic receptors, and that release is partly diffuse, potentially mediating autocrine or paracrine effects, and partly targeted toward other neurons, but that the latter mode is not necessarily, and not evidently, synaptic. Specifically, exocytosis from all locations increased significantly during incubation in modified Krebs' solution containing 56 nm potassium. Observation of the effects of cholinergic agonists (nicotine, carbachol, oxotremorine) and antagonists (atropine, AF-DX 116) showed that nicotinic and muscarinic excitation each, independently, increased the incidence of exocytosis from somata and dendrites. Exocytosis from nerve endings was not altered by nicotine, but was enhanced or, at high initial rates of exocytosis, decreased, by muscarinic stimulation. Evidence was obtained for muscarinic auto-inhibition of exocytosis from nerve terminals, occurring under basal incubation conditions, and for a muscarinic excitatory component of somatic exocytosis, elicitable by endogenous acetylcholine. The M2-selective muscarinic antagonist AF-DX 116 was found to modify the exocytotic response of the dendrites to oxotremorine, widening the range of its variation; this effect is consistent with recent evidence for the presence of M2-like muscarinic binding sites, in addition to M1-like binding, upon these dendrites [Ramcharan E. J. and Matthews M. R. (1996) Neuroscience 71, 797-832]. Over all conditions, disproportionately more sites of somatic and dendritic exocytosis were found to be located in regions of dendrosomatic and dendrodendritic apposition than would be expected from the relative extent of the neuronal surface occupied by these relationships. Such mechanisms of intraganglionic release may be expected to contribute to the regulation and integration of the behaviour of the various functionally distinctive populations of neurons in these ganglia, by autocrine, paracrine, and focal, neuroneuronal, routes of action. Similar phenomena of exocytotic soma-dendritic release might prove to subserve integrative neuroneuronal interactions more widely throughout the nervous system.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9276500     DOI: 10.1016/s0306-4522(96)00664-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroscience        ISSN: 0306-4522            Impact factor:   3.590


  12 in total

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Authors:  Brandi L Soldo; David R Giovannucci; Edward L Stuenkel; Hylan C Moises
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Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2003-01-17       Impact factor: 5.182

4.  Synaptic ultrastructural alterations anticipate the development of neuroaxonal dystrophy in sympathetic ganglia of aged and diabetic mice.

Authors:  Robert E Schmidt; Curtis A Parvin; Karen G Green
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Review 6.  Multiple signalling modalities mediated by dendritic exocytosis of oxytocin and vasopressin.

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Review 7.  Synaptic and extrasynaptic secretion of serotonin.

Authors:  Francisco F De-Miguel; Citlali Trueta
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8.  Somatic and prejunctional nicotinic receptors in cultured rat sympathetic neurones show different agonist profiles.

Authors:  D Kristufek; E Stocker; S Boehm; S Huck
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  1999-05-01       Impact factor: 5.182

9.  Somatic ATP release from guinea pig sympathetic neurons does not require calcium-induced calcium release from internal stores.

Authors:  Laura A Merriam; Sarah A Locknar; Beatrice M Girard; Rodney L Parsons
Journal:  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol       Date:  2010-07-28       Impact factor: 4.249

10.  Cycling of dense core vesicles involved in somatic exocytosis of serotonin by leech neurons.

Authors:  Citlali Trueta; Damien P Kuffler; Francisco F De-Miguel
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2012-06-06       Impact factor: 4.566

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