Volume 17, Number 3,
Issue of February 1, 1997
pp. 1101-1111
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Novel Modulatory Effect of L-Type Calcium Channels at Newly
Formed Neuromuscular Junctions
Received Sept. 27, 1996; revised Nov. 14, 1996; accepted Nov. 25, 1996.
Yoshie Sugiura and
Chien-Ping Ko
Neurobiology Program, Department of Biological Sciences, University
of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-2520
This study aimed to examine changes of presynaptic
voltage-sensitive calcium channel (VSCC) subtypes during synapse
formation and regeneration in relation to transmitter release at the
neuromuscular junction (NMJ). Synaptic potentials were recorded from
developing rat NMJs and from regenerating mouse and frog NMJs. As in
normal adult NMJs, evoked transmitter release was reduced by an N-type VSCC blocker in the frog and by a P/Q-type VSCC blocker in the mammal
at immature NMJs; however, various L-type VSCC blockers, both
dihydropyridine and nondihydropyridine antagonists,
increased evoked but not spontaneous release in a
dose-dependent manner at newly formed NMJs. This presynaptic
potentiation disappeared as NMJs matured. A rapid intracellular
Ca2+ buffer,
bis(O-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N
,N
-tetra-acetic
acid-AM, prevented the potentiation effect of nifedipine, but a slow
Ca2+ buffer, EGTA-AM, did not. Thus, the potentiation
effect of L-type blockers requires Ca2+ transients.
Pretreatment with Ca2+-activated K+ channel
blockers, iberiotoxin or charybdotoxin, did not prevent potentiation by
nifedipine at regenerating frog NMJs. Thus, Ca2+-activated
K+ channels were not likely involved in this potentiation.
In contrast, no additional potentiation by nifedipine was seen in
muscles pretreated with pertussis toxin (PTX), a G-protein blocker,
which by itself enhances evoked transmitter release at regenerating
frog NMJs. These results suggest the existence of multiple subtypes of
VSCCs at newly formed motor nerve terminals. In addition to the normal N- or P/Q-type VSCCs that mediate transmitter release, L-type VSCCs may
play a novel modulatory role in evoked transmitter release by
activating a mechanism linked to PTX-sensitive G-proteins during synapse maturation.
Key words:
voltage-sensitive calcium channels;
dihydropyridine;
neuromuscular junctions;
PTX-sensitive G-proteins;
synapse formation;
transmitter release