4.7 Article

Quantal size is independent of the release probability at hippocampal excitatory synapses

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 223-232

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3688-04.2005

Keywords

patch clamp; paired recordings; electron microscopy; quantal analysis; hippocampus; interneurons

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Short-term synaptic plasticity changes the reliability of transmission during repetitive activation and allows different neuronal ensembles to encode distinct features of action potential trains. Identifying the mechanisms and the locus of expression of such plasticity is essential for understanding neuronal information processing. To determine the quantal parameters and the locus of alterations during short-term plasticity of cortical glutamatergic synapses, EPSCs were evoked in hippocampal oriens-alveus interneurons by CA1 pyramidal cells. The robust short-term facilitation of this connection allowed us to examine the transmission under functionally relevant but widely different release probability (P-r) conditions. Paired whole-cell recordings permitted the functional and post hoc morphological characterization of the synapses. To determine the quantal size (q), the P-r, and the number of functional release sites (N-F), two independent quantal analysis methods were used. Light and electron microscopy were performed to identify the number of synaptic junctions (N-EM) between the recorded cells. The mean number of functional release sites (N-F(f) = 2.9 +/- 0.4; n = 8) as inferred from a simple binomial model with no quantal variance agreed well with the mean of N-EM (2.8 +/- 0.8; n = 6), but N-F(f) never matched N-EM when they were compared in individual pairs; however, including quantal variance in the model improved the functional prediction of the structural data. Furthermore, an increased P-r (4.8 +/- 0.8-fold) fully accounted for the marked short-term facilitation of EPSCs (5.0 +/- 0.7-fold), and q was independent of P-r. Our results are consistent with the one-release site, one-vesicle hypothesis.

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