4.5 Article

Quantal release of acetylcholine in mice with reduced levels of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 113, Issue 4, Pages 943-951

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-4159.2010.06657.x

Keywords

acetylcholine; MEPP; neuromuscular junction; post-tetanic potentiation; quantal content; synaptic vesicle

Funding

  1. FAPEMIG [CBB APQ-4536-4.01/07]
  2. NIH-Fogarty [R21 TW007800-02]
  3. CIHR [MOP-89919]
  4. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario [6656]
  5. CNPq [474445/2007-0]
  6. Instituto do Milenio Toxins/MCT

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P>Mammalian motor nerve terminals contain hundreds of thousands of synaptic vesicles, but only a fraction of these vesicles is immediately available for release, the remainder forming a reserve pool. The supply of vesicles is replenished through endocytosis, and newly formed vesicles are refilled with acetylcholine through a process that depends on the vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT). During expression of short-term plasticity, quantal release can be increased, but it is unknown whether this reflects enhanced recruitment of vesicles from the reserve pool or rapid recycling. We examined spontaneous and evoked release of acetylcholine at endplates from genetically modified VAChT KDHOM mice that express approximately 30% of the normal level of VAChT to determine steps rate-limited by synaptic vesicle filling. Quantal content and quantal size were reduced in VAChT KDHOM mice compared with wild-type controls. Although high-frequency stimulation did not reduce quantal size further, the post-tetanic increase in end-plate potential amplitude or MEPP frequency was significantly smaller in VAChT KDHOM mice. This was the case even when tetanic depression was eliminated using an extracellular solution containing reduced Ca2+ and raised Mg2+. These results reveal the dependence of short-term plasticity on the level of VAChT expression and efficient synaptic vesicle filling.

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