Abstract

Ultrastructural techniques and electron probe microanalysis were used to determine whether or not the smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) within presynaptic nerve terminals is a Ca-sequestering site. The three-dimensional structure of the SER was determined from serial sections of synaptosomes. The SER consists of flattened cisterns that may branch and are frequently juxtaposed to mitochondria. To investigate intraterminal Ca sequestration, synaptosomes were treated with saponin to disrupt the plasmalemmal permeability barrier. When these synaptosomes were incubated in solutions containing Ca, ATP, and oxalate, electrondense Ca oxalate deposits were found in intraterminal mitochondria, SER cisterns, and large vesicular profiles. Saponin-treated synaptosomes that were incubated in the presence of mitochondrial poisons contained electron-dense deposits within SER cisterns and large vesicular profiles, but very rarely in mitochondria. Similar deposits were observed within saponin-treated synaptosomes that were not post-fixed with OSO4, and within saponin-treated synaptosomes that were prepared for analysis by freeze-substitution. Electron-probe microanalyses of these deposits confirmed the presence of large concentrations of Ca. When oxalate was omitted from the incubation solutions, no electron-dense deposits were present in saponin-treated synaptosomes. In other control experiments, either the Ca ionophore A23187 or the Ca chelator EGTA was added to the incubation media; electron-dense deposits were very rarely observed within the intraterminal organelles of these saponin-treated synaptosomes. The data indicate that presynaptic nerve terminal SER is indeed a Ca-sequestering organelle.

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