4.8 Article

A single vesicular glutamate transporter is sufficient to fill a synaptic vesicle

Journal

NEURON
Volume 49, Issue 1, Pages 11-16

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2005.11.032

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [T32 GM008151, T32GM08151] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS045628-04, R01 NS045628-01, NS043171, R01 NS045628-03, NS045628, R01 NS045628, R01 NS045628-02, R01 NS051453, NS041543, R01 NS043171] Funding Source: Medline

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Quantal size is the postsynaptic response to the release of a single synaptic vesicle and is determined in part by the amount of transmitter within that vesicle. At glutamatergic synapses, the vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT) fills vesicles with glutamate. While elevated VGLUT expression increases quantal size, the minimum number of transporters required to fill a vesicle is unknown. In Drosophila DVGLUT mutants, reduced transporter levels lead to a dose-dependent reduction in the frequency of spontaneous quantal release with no change in quantal size. Quantal frequency is not limited by vesicle number or impaired exocytosis. This suggests that a single functional unit of transporter is both necessary and sufficient to fill a vesicle to completion and that vesicles without DVGLUT are empty. Consistent with the presence of empty vesicles, at dvglut mutant synapses synaptic vesicles are smaller, suggesting that vesicle filling and/or transporter level is an important determinant of vesicle size.

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