Abstract

Abstract Synapses are key elements in the communication between neurons in any given network of the normal adult, developmental and pathologically altered brain. Synapses are composed of nearly the same structural subelements: a presynaptic terminal containing mitochondria with an ultrastructurally visible density at the pre- and postsynaptic apposition zone. The presynaptic density is composed of a cocktail of various synaptic proteins involved in the binding, priming and docking of synaptic vesicles inducing synaptic transmission. Individual presynaptic terminals (synaptic boutons) contain a couple of hundred up to thousands of synaptic vesicles. The pre- and postsynaptic densities are separated by a synaptic cleft. The postsynaptic density, also containing various synaptic proteins and more importantly various neurotransmitter receptors and their subunits specifically composed and arranged at individual synaptic complexes, reside at the target structures of the presynaptic boutons that could be somata, dendrites, spines or initial segments of axons. Beside the importance of the network in which synapses are integrated, their individual structural composition critically determines the dynamic properties within a given connection or the computations of the entire network, in particular, the number, size and shape of the active zone, the structural equivalent to a functional neurotransmitter release site, together with the size and organization of the three functionally defined pools of synaptic vesicles, namely the readily releasable, the recycling and the resting pool, are important structural subelements governing the ‘behavior’ of synaptic complexes within a given network such as the cortical column. In the late last century, neuroscientists started to generate quantitative 3D-models of synaptic boutons and their target structures that is one possible way to correlate structure with function, thus allowing reliable predictions about their function. The re-introduction of electron microscopy (EM) as an important tool achieved by modern high-end, high-resolution transmission-EM, focused ion beam scanning-EM, CRYO-EM and EM-tomography have enormously improved our knowledge about the synaptic organization of the brain not only in various animal species, but also allowed new insights in the ‘microcosms’ of the human brain in health and disease.

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