Abstract
We measured the time courses of two key components of the synaptic vesicle cycle during recovery from synaptic depression under different conditions, and used this and other information to create a kinetic model of the vesicle cycle. End plate potential (EPP) amplitudes were used to follow recovery from synaptic depression after different amounts of tetanic stimulation. This provided an estimate of the time course of vesicle mobilization from the reserve pool to the docked (readily releasable) pool. In addition, FM1–43 was used to measure the rate of membrane retrieval after tetanic stimulation, and the amount of membrane transferred to the surface membrane. This provided a measure of the rate of refilling of the reserve pool with recycled vesicles. The time courses of both synaptic depression and endocytosis were slowed by prolonged tetanic stimulation. This behavior could be fitted by a simple model, assuming a first-order kinetics for both vesicle endocytosis and mobilization. The results show that a nearly 20-fold decrease in the rate constant of endocytosis greatly delays refilling of the depleted reserve pool. However, to fully account for the slower recovery of depression, a decrease in the rate constant of vesicle mobilization from the reserve pool of about sixfold is also required.
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