Abstract

The potentiated afferent mixed synapses of the Mauthner cells of fry and adult goldfish in stumps of the medulla oblongata incubated long-term in vitro were studied by electrophysiological and electron microscopic methods. It was shown that brief high-frequency stimulation of posterior branches of the eighth nerve induced a long-term potentiation of electrotonic transmission at large and small mixed club endings. It was about 135% upon subthreshold stimulation and about 200% upon suprathreshold stimulation. The ultrastructural analysis of ultrathin sections of potentiated mixed synaptic endings revealed an increase in the dimensions of desmosome-like contacts which was proportional to the degree of potentiation, about 135% or 200%, depending on the type of stimulation. The dimensions of gap junctions remained unchanged. The dimensions of active zones at potentiated synapses were reduced two-fold as compared with their unpotentiated counterparts, irrespective of the type of stimulation. Considering that desmosome-like contacts consist predominantly of F-actin, a molecule which possesses electroconductivity, it can be assumed that this cytoskeletal protein is involved in the process of potentiation. The increase in the synapse electrical conductivity can be mediated either directly, by shunting the synaptic junction with polymer actin filaments in the region of desmosome-like contacts, or indirectly, via the interaction of actin with gap junction connections situated nearby.

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