Abstract

The aim of our experiments has been to analyse how formation of chemical synapses affects the distribution of calcium (Ca2+) currents and neurite outgrowth of leech Retzius cells. Previous results showed that Ca2+ currents measured in the initial process or 'stump' of postsynaptic cells were significantly smaller than those in corresponding sites on presynaptic neurons. In the present experiments, neurons were plated together in close apposition as pairs or as triads, with the tip of one Retzius cell touching the soma of another. Ca2+ currents from selected areas of the neuronal surfaces were measured by loose-patch recording before and after the formation of chemically mediated synaptic connections, which developed in about 8 h. With three cells arranged in a row, the last of the series, which was purely postsynaptic (i.e. with no target), also showed a dramatic reduction in Ca2+ currents in its initial segment, compared with the currents seen in either the first cell (purely presynaptic) or the second cell of the chain (which was both postsynaptic to the first cell and presynaptic to the third). This suggests that retrograde as well as anterograde effects on Ca2+ currents occurred as a result of synapse formation: the Ca2+ currents in the middle cell did not decrease although a synapse had been formed on it. To test for additional consequences of synapse formation, neurite outgrowth was measured in postsynaptic cells and in single cells plated on an extract of extracellular matrix containing laminin (ECM-laminin). After 48 h, the total length of neuritic outgrowth in postsynaptic cells was only about one third of that in single cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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