Abstract

The inhibitory synapse of the crayfish neuromuscular junction was used to examine mechanisms underlying the F2 component of synaptic facilitation. Because previous studies have shown accelerated transmitter release during facilitation, we examined whether an activity-dependent plasticity in I(Ca) could underlie this acceleration. We established that fluorescent transients generated by Magnesium Green can resolve small differences in presynaptic Ca(2+) influx that correlate with changes in IPSC waveform. However, there was no change in Ca(2+) transients associated with the accelerated release. Analyzing the initial rise of IPSC and the duration of the presynaptic spike yielded a depolarization-release coupling plot that captures the impact of spike waveform on the initial rate of release. We conclude that accelerated release during F2 facilitation cannot be attributed to plasticity of I(Ca) or modulation of spike waveform. Kinetic analysis showed a reduction in synaptic delay during facilitation only when broad action potentials were used. In unfacilitated release, synaptic delay increased as spike duration lengthened. We propose that small single Ca(2+) channel currents during the plateau phase of broad action potentials raise local Ca(2+) concentration only enough to fill a high-affinity site. Occupation of this site in itself, or events downstream, would convert a vesicle from control to facilitated state. If the conversion were a slow process, it could explain the changes in synaptic delay reported here. This hypothesis can also account for a number of observations related to Ca(2+) cooperativity and synaptic facilitation.

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