학술논문

Physiologic and Nanoscale Distinctions Define Glutamatergic Synapses in Tonic vs Phasic Neurons.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Neuroscience. 6/21/2023, Vol. 43 Issue 25, p4598-4611. 14p.
Subject
*ACTION potentials
*NEURONS
*MOTOR neurons
*SYNAPSES
*SYNAPTIC vesicles
*GLUTAMATE receptors
*METHYL aspartate receptors
Language
ISSN
0270-6474
Abstract
Neurons exhibit a striking degree of functional diversity, each one tuned to the needs of the circuitry in which it is embedded. A fundamental functional dichotomy occurs in activity patterns, with some neurons firing at a relatively constant “tonic” rate, while others fire in bursts, a “phasic” pattern. Synapses formed by tonic versus phasic neurons are also functionally differentiated, yet the bases of their distinctive properties remain enigmatic. A major challenge toward illuminating the synaptic differences between tonic and phasic neurons is the difficulty in isolating their physiological properties. At the Drosophila neuromuscular junction, most muscle fibers are coinnervated by two motor neurons: the tonic “MN-Ib” and phasic “MN-Is.” Here, we used selective expression of a newly developed botulinum neurotoxin transgene to silence tonic or phasic motor neurons in Drosophila larvae of either sex. This approach highlighted major differences in their neurotransmitter release properties, including probability, short-term plasticity, and vesicle pools. Furthermore, Ca21 imaging demonstrated ;2-fold greater Ca21 influx at phasic neuron release sites relative to tonic, along with an enhanced synaptic vesicle coupling. Finally, confocal and super-resolution imaging revealed that phasic neuron release sites are organized in a more compact arrangement, with enhanced stoichiometry of voltage-gated Ca21 channels relative to other active zone scaffolds. These data suggest that distinctions in active zone nano-architecture and Ca21 influx collaborate to differentially tune glutamate release at tonic versus phasic synaptic subtypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]