STED microscopy reveals that synaptotagmin remains clustered after synaptic vesicle exocytosis
Top Cited Papers
- 1 April 2006
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 440 (7086) , 935-939
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04592
Abstract
Synaptic transmission is mediated by neurotransmitters that are stored in synaptic vesicles and released by exocytosis upon activation. The vesicle membrane is then retrieved by endocytosis, and synaptic vesicles are regenerated and re-filled with neurotransmitter1. Although many aspects of vesicle recycling are understood, the fate of the vesicles after fusion is still unclear. Do their components diffuse on the plasma membrane, or do they remain together? This question has been difficult to answer because synaptic vesicles are too small ( ∼ 40 nm in diameter) and too densely packed to be resolved by available fluorescence microscopes. Here we use stimulated emission depletion (STED)2 to reduce the focal spot area by about an order of magnitude below the diffraction limit, thereby resolving individual vesicles in the synapse. We show that synaptotagmin I, a protein resident in the vesicle membrane, remains clustered in isolated patches on the presynaptic membrane regardless of whether the nerve terminals are mildly active or intensely stimulated. This suggests that at least some vesicle constituents remain together during recycling. Our study also demonstrates that questions involving cellular structures with dimensions of a few tens of nanometres can be resolved with conventional far-field optics and visible light.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nanoscale Resolution in the Focal Plane of an Optical MicroscopePhysical Review Letters, 2005
- Synaptic vesicle poolsNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2005
- The use of Gauss-Laguerre vector beams in STED microscopyOptics Express, 2004
- Synaptotagmin I is necessary for compensatory synaptic vesicle endocytosis in vivoNature, 2003
- Toward fluorescence nanoscopyNature Biotechnology, 2003
- Single synaptic vesicles fusing transiently and successively without loss of identityNature, 2003
- Variation in the number, location and size of synaptic vesicles provides an anatomical basis for the nonuniform probability of release at hippocampal CA1 synapsesNeuropharmacology, 1995
- Breaking the diffraction resolution limit by stimulated emission: stimulated-emission-depletion fluorescence microscopyOptics Letters, 1994
- TURNOVER OF TRANSMITTER AND SYNAPTIC VESICLES AT THE FROG NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTIONThe Journal of cell biology, 1973
- EVIDENCE FOR RECYCLING OF SYNAPTIC VESICLE MEMBRANE DURING TRANSMITTER RELEASE AT THE FROG NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTIONThe Journal of cell biology, 1973