Abstract

Activity‐dependent bulk endocytosis (ADBE) is the dominant synaptic vesicle (SV) endocytosis mode in central nerve terminals during intense neuronal activity. By definition this mode is triggered by neuronal activity; however, key questions regarding its mechanism of activation remain unaddressed. To determine the basic requirements for ADBE triggering in central nerve terminals, we decoupled SV fusion events from activity‐dependent calcium influx using either clostridial neurotoxins or buffering of intracellular calcium. ADBE was monitored both optically and morphologically by observing uptake of the fluid phase markers tetramethylrhodamine‐dextran and horse radish peroxidase respectively. Ablation of SV fusion with tetanus toxin resulted in the arrest of ADBE, but had no effect on other calcium‐dependent events such as activity‐dependent dynamin I dephosphorylation, indicating that SV exocytosis is necessary for triggering. Furthermore, the calcium chelator EGTA abolished ADBE while leaving SV exocytosis intact, demonstrating that ADBE is triggered by intracellular free calcium increases outside the active zone. Activity‐dependent dynamin I dephosphorylation was also arrested in EGTA‐treated neurons, consistent with its proposed role in triggering ADBE. Thus, SV fusion and increased cytoplasmic free calcium are both necessary but not sufficient individually to trigger ADBE. Activity‐dependent bulk endocytosis (ADBE) is the dominant synaptic vesicle (SV) endocytosis mode in central nerve terminals during intense neuronal activity. To determine the minimal requirements for ADBE triggering, we decoupled SV fusion events from activity‐dependent calcium influx using either clostridial neurotoxins or buffering of intracellular calcium. We found that SV fusion and increased cytoplasmic free calcium are both necessary but not sufficient to trigger ADBE.

Highlights

  • Activity-dependent bulk endocytosis (ADBE) is the dominant synaptic vesicle (SV) endocytosis mode in central nerve terminals during intense neuronal activity

  • By decoupling SV fusion events from activity-dependent calcium influx, we demonstrate that both SV exocytosis and [intracellular free calcium (Ca2+]i) increases outside the active zone microdomain are necessary but not sufficient for the triggering of ADBE

  • Extracellular calcium influx is essential for activation of ADBE Intense neuronal activity triggers ADBE; basic questions relating to which initial events are either necessary or sufficient to activate this endocytosis mode have still to be addressed

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Summary

Introduction

Activity-dependent bulk endocytosis (ADBE) is the dominant synaptic vesicle (SV) endocytosis mode in central nerve terminals during intense neuronal activity. CME is the dominant endocytosis mode during mild stimulation (Granseth et al.2006); during more intense activity, it becomes saturated (Sankaranarayanan and Ryan 2000), potentially because of a finite pool of clathrin molecules (Lopez-Murcia et al 2014). Under these intense stimulation conditions, additional SV retrieval capacity is provided by activitydependent bulk endocytosis (ADBE), which invaginates large areas of plasma membrane to form bulk endosomes direct from the plasma membrane (Clayton and Cousin 2009; Cousin 2009).

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