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Selective Depletion of Clear Synaptic Vesicles and Enhanced Quantal Transmitter Release at Frog Motor Nerve Endings Produced by Trachynilysin, a Protein Toxin Isolated from Stonefish (Synanceia trachynis) Venom
Authors:Cesare Colasante,Fré    ric A. Meunier,Arnold S. Kreger,Jordi Molgó  
Affiliation:Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 91198 Gif sur Yvette Cedex, France;Institut des Neurosciences, (URA, CNRS 1488), UniversitéPierre et Marie Curie, 7 Quai Saint Bernard, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France;Medical Sciences Research Institute, 520 Huntmar Park Drive, Herndon, Virginia 22070, USA
Abstract:
Our previous observation that low concentrations of stonefish (Synanceia trachynis) venom elicit spontaneous quantal acetylcholine release from vertebrate motor nerve terminals prompted our present study to purify the quantal transmitter-releasing toxin present in the venom and to characterize the toxin's ability to alter the ultrastructure and immunoreactivity of frog motor nerve terminals. Fractionation of S. trachynis venom by sequential anion exchange fast protein-liquid chromatography (FPLC) and size-exclusion FPLC yielded a highly purified preparation of a membrane-perturbing (haemolytic) protein toxin, named trachynilysin. Trachynilysin (2–20 μg/ml) significantly increased spontaneous quantal acetylcholine release from motor endings, as detected by recording miniature endplate potentials from isolated frog cutaneous pectoris neuromuscular preparations. Ultrastructural analysis of nerve terminals in which quantal acetylcholine release was stimulated to exhaustion by 3 h exposure to trachynilysin revealed swelling of nerve terminals and marked depletion of small clear synaptic vesicles. However, trachynilysin did not induce a parallel depletion of large dense-core vesicles. Large dense-core vesicles contained calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), as revealed by colloidal gold immunostaining, and trachynilysin-treated nerve endings exhibited CGRP-like immunofluorescence similar to that of untreated terminals. Our results indicate that the ability of stonefish venom to elicit spontaneous quantal acetylcholine release from vertebrate motor nerve terminals is a function of trachynilysin, which selectively stimulates the release of small clear synaptic vesicles and impairs the recycling of small clear synaptic vesicles but does not affect the release of large dense-core vesicles. Trachynilysin may be a valuable tool for use in other secretory terminals to discriminate between neurotransmitter and neuropeptide release.
Keywords:acetylcholine    miniature endplate potentials    calcitonin gene related peptide    large dense core vesicles    neurotoxin
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