4.7 Article

Trans-endocytosis via spinules in adult rat hippocampus

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 17, Pages 4233-4241

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0287-04.2004

Keywords

dendritic spines; exocytosis; endocytosis; coated vesicles; spinules; synapse; serial section electron microscopy; three-dimensional reconstructions

Categories

Funding

  1. NIBIB NIH HHS [EB002170, R01 EB002170] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [NS21184, NS33574, R01 NS021184, R37 NS021184, R01 NS033574] Funding Source: Medline

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Locations of a distinctive mode of trans-endocytosis involving dendrites, axons, and glia were quantified through serial section electron microscopy. Short vesicular or long vermiform evaginations emerged from dendrites and axons and were engulfed by presynaptic or neighboring axons, astrocytes, and, surprisingly, a growth cone to form double-membrane structures called spinules. In total, 254 spinules were evaluated in 326 mum(3) of stratum radiatum in area CA1 of mature rat hippocampus. Spinules emerged from spine heads (62%), necks (24%), axons (13%), dendritic shafts (1%), or nonsynaptic protrusions (< 1%) and invaginated into axons (similar to 90%), astrocytic processes (similar to 8%), or a growth cone (similar to 1%). Coated pits occurred on the engulfing membrane at the tips of most spinules (69%), and double-membrane structures occurred freely in axonal and astrocytic cytoplasm, suggesting trans-endocytosis. Spinule locations differed among mushroom and thin spines. For mushroom spines, most (84%) of the spinules were engulfed by presynaptic axons, 16% by neighboring axons, and none by astrocytic processes. At thin spines, only 17% of the spinules were engulfed by presynaptic axons, whereas 67% were engulfed by neighboring axons and 14% by astrocytic processes. Spinules engulfed by astrocytic processes support the growing evidence that perisynaptic glia interact directly with synapses at least on thin spines. Spinules with neighboring axons may provide a mechanism for synaptic competition in the mature brain. Trans-endocytosis of spinules by presynaptic axons suggest retrograde signaling or coordinated remodeling of presynaptic and postsynaptic membranes to remove transient perforations and assemble the postsynaptic density of large synapses on mushroom spines.

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