Vesicular glutamate filling and AMPA receptor occupancy at the calyx of Held synapse of immature rats |
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Authors: | Takayuki Yamashita Takeshi Kanda Kohgaku Eguchi Tomoyuki Takahashi |
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Affiliation: | Cellular and Molecular Synaptic Function Unit, Initial Research Project (IRP), Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Promotion Corporation (OIST), Okinawa 904-2234, Japan;RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Saitama 351-0198, Japan;Department of Neurophysiology, Doshisha University Faculty of Life and Medical Sciences, Kyoto 610-0394, Japan |
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Abstract: | At central glutamatergic synapses, neurotransmitter often saturates postsynaptic AMPA receptors (AMPARs), thereby restricting the dynamic range of synaptic efficacy. Here, using simultaneous pre- and postsynaptic whole-cell recordings, at the calyx of Held synapse of immature rats, we have investigated the mechanism by which transmitter glutamate saturates postsynaptic AMPARs. When we loaded l -glutamate (1–100 m m ) into presynaptic terminals, the quantal EPSC (qEPSC) amplitude changed in a concentration-dependent manner. At physiological temperature (36–37°C), the qEPSC amplitude increased when intraterminal l -glutamate concentration was elevated from 1 m m to 10 m m , but it reached a plateau at 10 m m . This plateau persisted after bath-application of the low affinity AMPAR antagonist kynurenate, suggesting that it was caused by saturation of vesicular filling with glutamate rather than by saturation of postsynaptic AMPARs. In contrast to qEPSCs, action potential-evoked EPSCs remained unchanged by increasing intraterminal l -glutamate from 1 m m to 100 m m , even at room temperature, indicating that multi-quantal glutamate saturated postsynaptic AMPARs. This saturation could be relieved by blocking AMPAR desensitization using cyclothiazide (100 μ m ). The concentration of ambient glutamate in the slice, estimated from NMDA receptor current fluctuations, was 55 n m ; this was far below the concentration required for AMPAR desensitization. We conclude that rapid AMPAR desensitization, caused by glutamate released from multiple vesicles during synaptic transmission, underlies postsynaptic AMPAR saturation at this immature calyceal synapse before the onset of hearing. |
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