Abstract

At the core of the rhythmically active leech heartbeat central pattern generator are pairs of mutually inhibitory interneurons. Synaptic transmission between these interneurons consists of spike-mediated and graded components, both of which wax and wane on a cycle-by-cycle basis. Low-threshold Ca2+ currents gate the graded component. Ca imaging experiments indicate that these low-threshold currents are widespread in the neurons and that they contribute to neuron-wide changes in internal background Ca2+ concentration (Ivanov and Calabrese, 2000). During normal rhythmic activity, background Ca2+ concentration oscillates, and thus graded synaptic transmission waxes and wanes as the neurons move from the depolarized to the inhibited phases of their activity. Here we show that in addition to gating graded transmitter release, the background Ca2+ concentration changes evoked by low-threshold Ca2+ currents modulate spike-mediated synaptic transmission. We develop stimulation paradigms to simulate the changes in baseline membrane potential that accompany rhythmic bursting. Using Ca imaging and electrophysiological measurements, we show that the strength of spike-mediated synaptic transmission follows the changes in background Ca2+ concentration that these baseline potential changes evoke and that it does not depend on previous spike activity. Moreover, we show using internal EGTA and photo-release of caged Ca2+ and caged Ca2+ chelator that changes in internal Ca2+ concentration modulate spike-mediated synaptic transmission. Thus activity-dependent changes in background Ca2+, which have been implicated in homeostatic regulation of intrinsic membrane currents and synaptic strength, may also regulate synaptic transmission in an immediate way to modulate synaptic strength cycle by cycle in rhythmically active networks.

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