This project is aimed at a greater understanding of the mechanisms of regulation of neurotransmitter release, which is critical to an understanding of the function of the nervous system in health and disease. It uses a novel vertebrate preparation: the synapses formed by motorneuron neurites on muscle cells in Xenopus nerve muscle cultures, in which pre- and postsynaptic processes can be patched-clamped and ionic currents analyzed directly and correlated with quantal neurotransmitter release. Of particular interest is the mechanism whereby Ca2+ influx triggers vesicle fusion. Ca2+ dynamics at active zones has been modeled extensively, but direct measurements have proved difficult. In the Xenopus synapses, large conductance Ca2+-dependent K+ (BK or rnaxi-K) channels are functionally coupled to Ca2+channels and concentrated at active zones. The I
Sun, Xiao-Ping; Chen, Bo-Ming; Sand, Olav et al. (2010) Depolarization-induced Ca2+ entry preferentially evokes release of large quanta in the developing Xenopus neuromuscular junction. J Neurophysiol 104:2730-40 |
Pattillo, J M; Yazejian, B; DiGregorio, D A et al. (2001) Contribution of presynaptic calcium-activated potassium currents to transmitter release regulation in cultured Xenopus nerve-muscle synapses. Neuroscience 102:229-40 |
Yazejian, B; DiGregorio, D A; Vergara, J L et al. (1997) Direct measurements of presynaptic calcium and calcium-activated potassium currents regulating neurotransmitter release at cultured Xenopus nerve-muscle synapses. J Neurosci 17:2990-3001 |
Chen, B M; Grinnell, A D (1995) Integrins and modulation of transmitter release from motor nerve terminals by stretch. Science 269:1578-80 |