Roles of Ca2+, Hyperpolarization and Cyclic Nucleotide-Activated Channel Activation, and Actin in Temporal Synaptic Tagging
Open Access
- 28 April 2004
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 24 (17) , 4205-4212
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.0111-04.2004
Abstract
At crayfish neuromuscular junctions, cAMP increases transmitter released by action potentials by activating two effectors, hyperpolarization and cyclic nucleotide-activated channels (HCNCs) and a separate target that has been tentatively identified as exchange protein activated by cAMP (Epac). Intense electrical activity in the motor neuron induces a long-term facilitation (LTF) of transmitter release in which hyperpolarization from an electrogenic Na+-K+ exchanger activates HCNCs. The coupling of HCNCs to transmission involves actin. After LTF induction, cAMP further increases transmission in an HCNC-independent manner, activating the second target. This relaxation of the requirement for HCNC activation to enhance release is called temporal synaptic tagging. Tagging lasts at least 1 d but develops only in the 10 min period after electrical activity. The HCNCs are activated by the post-tetanic hyperpolarization occurring during this time. Both synaptic tagging and LTF induction depend on presynaptic Ca2+ accumulation during activity; both are blocked by EGTA-AM, and LTF is also prevented by stimulation in a low-[Ca2+] medium. Actin depolymerizers prevent induction of LTF and tagging, with little effect on HCNCs, whose sensitivity to cAMP and HCNC blockers is unaffected by tagging. Enhancement of actin polymerization can rescue tagging from HCNC block, suggesting that actin acts at a step after HCNC activation. These and other recent results suggest a model in which HCNC activation, followed by a process involving actin polymerization, acts cooperatively with [Ca2+] to induce tagging, after which only Epac activation is required for cAMP to further enhance transmission.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Direct modulation of synaptic vesicle priming by GABAB receptor activation at a glutamatergic synapseNature, 2003
- HCN channels are expressed differentially in retinal bipolar cells and concentrated at synaptic terminalsEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 2003
- Pharmacological upregulation of h-channels reduces the excitability of pyramidal neuron dendritesNature Neuroscience, 2002
- Short-Term Synaptic PlasticityAnnual Review of Physiology, 2002
- Critical Role of cAMP-GEFII·Rim2 Complex in Incretin-potentiated Insulin SecretionJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- Hyperpolarization‐activated currents in presynaptic terminals of mouse cerebellar basket cellsThe Journal of Physiology, 2000
- Synapse-Specific, Long-Term Facilitation of Aplysia Sensory to Motor Synapses: A Function for Local Protein Synthesis in Memory StorageCell, 1997
- Synaptic tagging and long-term potentiationNature, 1997
- Regeneration from crayfish phasic and tonic motor axonsin vitroJournal of Neurobiology, 1993
- The inhibitory nerve supply of the leg muscles of different decapod crustaceansJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1941