Abstract
Exocytotic release of neurotransmitter can be quantified by electrophysiological recording from postsynaptic neurons. Alternatively, fusion of synaptic vesicles with the cell membrane can be measured as increased capacitance by recording directly from a presynaptic neuron. The “Sine + DC” technique is based on recording from an unbranched cell, represented by an electrically equivalent RC‐circuit. It is challenging to extend such measurements to branching neurons where exocytosis occurs at a distance from a somatic recording electrode. The AII amacrine is an important inhibitory interneuron of the mammalian retina and there is evidence that exocytosis at presynaptic lobular dendrites increases the capacitance. Here, we combined electrophysiological recording and computer simulations with realistic compartmental models to explore capacitance measurements of rat AII amacrine cells. First, we verified the ability of the “Sine + DC” technique to detect depolarization‐evoked exocytosis in physiological recordings. Next, we used compartmental modeling to demonstrate that capacitance measurements can detect increased membrane surface area at lobular dendrites. However, the accuracy declines for lobular dendrites located further from the soma due to frequency‐dependent signal attenuation. For sine wave frequencies ≥1 kHz, the magnitude of the total releasable pool of synaptic vesicles will be significantly underestimated. Reducing the sine wave frequency increases overall accuracy, but when the frequency is sufficiently low that exocytosis can be detected with high accuracy from all lobular dendrites (~100 Hz), strong electrical coupling between AII amacrines compromises the measurements. These results need to be taken into account in studies with capacitance measurements from these and other electrically coupled neurons.
Highlights
During chemical synaptic transmission, neurotransmitter is released by exocytosis of synaptic vesicles from the presynaptic neuron and, after diffusion across the synaptic cleft, it can bind to ionotropic and metabotropic receptors on the postsynaptic neuron
Exocytosis of synaptic vesicles from the lobular appendages of AII amacrines is expected to increase the membrane surface area, and the membrane capacitance, when the vesicles fuse with the cell membrane (Balakrishnan et al 2015)
Because an AII amacrine has an elaborate dendritic tree that cannot be represented by an electrically equivalent simple RC-circuit, it is unclear to which extent exocytosis occurring at different locations in the cell can be detected and how this is reflected in changes of the apparent capacitance measured with a lock-in amplifier
Summary
Neurotransmitter is released by exocytosis of synaptic vesicles from the presynaptic neuron and, after diffusion across the synaptic cleft, it can bind to ionotropic and metabotropic receptors on the postsynaptic neuron (reviewed by Su€dhof and Rizo 2012; Helmchen and N€agerl 2016; Silver et al 2016). This process can be studied quantitatively by measuring the magnitude and time course of the postsynaptic current via electrophysiological whole-cell recording.
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