4.4 Article

Transient reversal of the sodium/calcium exchanger boosts presynaptic calcium and synaptic transmission at a cerebellar synapse

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 109, Issue 6, Pages 1669-1680

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00854.2012

Keywords

calcium; cerebellum; NCX; parallel fibers; transmitter release

Funding

  1. Neurological Foundation of New Zealand
  2. University of Otago Research Grant
  3. University of Otago PhD Scholarship
  4. Department of Physiology AIM Grant

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Roome CJ, Power EM, Empson RM. Transient reversal of the sodium/calcium exchanger boosts presynaptic calcium and synaptic transmission at a cerebellar synapse. J Neurophysiol 109: 1669-1680, 2013. First published December 19, 2012; doi: 10.1152/jn.00854.2012.-The sodium/calcium exchanger (NCX) is a widespread transporter that exchanges sodium and calcium ions across excitable membranes. Normally, NCX mainly operates in its forward mode, harnessing the electrochemical gradient of sodium ions to expel calcium. During membrane depolarization or elevated internal sodium levels, NCX can instead switch the direction of net flux to expel sodium and allow calcium entry. Such reverse-mode NCX operation is frequently implicated during pathological or artificially extended periods of depolarization, not during normal activity. We have used fast calcium imaging, mathematical simulation, and whole cell electrophysiology to study the role of NCX at the parallel fiber-to-Purkinje neuron synapse in the mouse cerebellum. We show that nontraditional, reverse-mode NCX activity boosts the amplitude and duration of parallel fiber calcium transients during short bursts of high-frequency action potentials typical of their behavior in vivo. Simulations, supported by experimental manipulations, showed that accumulation of intracellular sodium drove NCX into reverse mode. This mechanism fueled additional calcium influx into the parallel fibers that promoted synaptic transmission to Purkinje neurons for up to 400 ms after the burst. Thus we provide the first functional demonstration of transient and fast NCX-mediated calcium entry at a major central synapse. This unexpected contribution from reverse-mode NCX appears critical for shaping presynaptic calcium dynamics and transiently boosting synaptic transmission, and is likely to optimize the accuracy of cerebellar information transfer.

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