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Volume 17, Number 19,
Issue of October 1, 1997
pp. 7203-7209
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Evidence That Cysteine String Proteins Regulate an Early Step in
the Ca2+-Dependent Secretion of Neurotransmitter at
Drosophila Neuromuscular Junctions
Joy A. Umbach and
Cameron B. Gundersen
Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology and The Crump
Institute for Biological Imaging, University of California at Los
Angeles School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California, 90095
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Previous work indicated that the temperature-dependent block of
synaptic transmission in cysteine string protein (csp) mutants of
Drosophila was attributable to a failure of nerve
impulses to trigger transmitter release. The current investigations
were undertaken to resolve in more detail the mechanism of this
transmission deficit. Our studies reveal that the spider venom toxin
-latrotoxin can trigger a sustained discharge of quanta at
neuromuscular junctions of csp mutant larvae at
nonpermissive temperature. The same is true of the calcium ionophore
ionomycin. However, solutions with an elevated concentration of K or Ca
ions fail to circumvent the block of quantal secretion in these
mutants. Likewise, 4-aminopyridine, which augments transmitter release
at permissive temperature in csp mutants, fails to
reverse the inhibition of impulse-evoked transmitter release at
elevated temperature. These data are consistent with the hypothesis
that there is a deficit either in Ca ion entry or in the ability of Ca
ions to trigger exocytosis in csp mutants at
nonpermissive temperatures. In part, because of previous work showing
that csps are important for the functional expression of N-type Ca
channels in frog oocytes, we favor the idea that csps participate in a
regulatory interaction involving presynaptic Ca channels.
Key words:
cysteine string proteins;
synaptic transmission;
-latrotoxin;
presynaptic calcium channels;
Drosophila;
shibire
INTRODUCTION
Cysteine string proteins (csps)
(Zinsmaier et al., 1990
) are highly conserved proteins associated with
synaptic vesicles and other secretory organelles (Mastrogiacomo et al.,
1994
; Braun and Scheller, 1995
; Mastrogiacomo and Gundersen, 1995
;
Chamberlain et al., 1996
; Buchner and Gundersen, 1997
).
Immunohistochemistry reveals that csps are distributed ubiquitously at
nerve endings in the central and peripheral nervous systems of both
invertebrates and vertebrates (Zinsmaier et al., 1994
; Kohan et al.,
1995
). However, the precise role of csps in presynaptic events remains uncertain. Early investigations using csp antisense RNA suggested that
csps were important for the function of presynaptic, N-type Ca channels
(Gundersen and Umbach, 1992
). Subsequently, csp mutant alleles of Drosophila were shown to display aberrant
electroretinograms, temperature-sensitive (ts) paralysis, and premature
death (Zinsmaier et al., 1994
). The cellular basis of the ts paralysis
of csp mutants was shown to reflect the failure of nerve
impulses to trigger neurotransmitter release at nonpermissive
temperatures (Umbach et al., 1994
). Interestingly, spontaneous
transmitter release persisted in these mutants (Umbach et al., 1994
).
Because of the retention of this form of quantal secretion, we
hypothesized that csp mutant Drosophila were
defective at a step in the process that couples nerve excitation to
secretion (Umbach et al., 1994
).
A recent review (Sudhof, 1995
) contained an alternative hypothesis for
csp function. This hypothesis was based on two observations. First,
adult csp mutants display a paucity of synaptic vesicles at
central synapses (Zinsmaier et al., 1994
). Second, csps harbor in their
primary sequence a J domain, a putative site for interaction in
vivo with heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) molecular chaperones (Caplan et al., 1993
; Silver and Way, 1993
). Because at least one
member of the large family of Hsp70 chaperones is involved in the
uncoating of clathrin-coated vesicles (Chappell et al., 1986
), Sudhof
(1995)
postulated that csps might participate in this process of
clathrin coat removal. By inference, the diminished number of synaptic
vesicles at nerve endings in the brain of adult csp mutants
might therefore arise from a defect in synaptic vesicle recycling
(Sudhof, 1995
).
In light of these widely divergent hypotheses concerning csp function,
we undertook investigations to determine whether a defect in synaptic
vesicle recycling could explain the ts failure of synaptic transmission
in csp mutant larvae. Our studies reveal that even when
nerve impulses fail to trigger the release of a single quantum of
transmitter, nerve endings of csp mutant
Drosophila retain a large store of readily releasable
quanta. These quanta can be released in response to the spider venom
toxin
-latrotoxin (
-Ltx) and the calcium ionophore ionomycin.
However, various strategies that require the opening of presynaptic Ca
channels fail to elicit vesicular exocytosis. Thus, instead of a role
in synaptic vesicle recycling, our data, together with previous results (Gundersen and Umbach, 1992
), suggest that csps participate in a novel
modulatory interaction involving presynaptic Ca channels.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Electrophysiology.Electrophysiological recordings
were made of spontaneous miniature excitatory junctional potentials
(mejps) and nerve impulse-evoked excitatory junctional potentials
(ejps), events using dorsal longitudinal muscle fibers 6 and 7 of
wild-type (Canton S) or cspX1 (Zinsmaier et
al., 1994
) larval Drosophila exactly as described by Umbach
et al. (1994)
. We emphasize that for all experiments using this
csp mutant strain, a preliminary screening for temperature sensitivity was conducted as discussed by Umbach et al. (1994)
. Experiments using shibire mutant Drosophila used
the shits1 strain (Grigliatti et al., 1973
).
The standard recording solution contained (in mM): 140 NaCl, 2 KCl, 1 CaCl2, 5 MgCl2, 5 glucose, and 5 HEPES with pH adjusted to 7.0 using NaOH.
Reagents and alternative recording conditions.
-Ltx, a 125 kDa component of black widow spider venom, was purified as described by
Grasso and Mastrogiacomo (1992)
. This toxin preparation was recently
shown to be active in promoting high-frequency mejp discharges in
wild-type Drosophila (J. Umbach, unpublished observations) and was bath-applied to achieve a final concentration of 5-10 nM.
To assess the effects of solutions with elevated Ca or K ion
composition, we augmented the normal recording solution with CaCl2 to 5 mM (high-Ca solution) or raised the
KCl concentration to 60 mM and lowered NaCl to 82 mM (high-K solution). Analysis of mejp frequency in
experiments using high-K solution was done with the muscle fiber
resting potential held at
60 mV by the injection of continuous
negative DC current. To deplete shibire mutants of
releasable quanta, the high-K solution had 3 mM
CaCl2 and 3 mM MgCl2. For
experiments using the calcium ionophore ionomycin (Calbiochem, La
Jolla, CA), a stock of ionomycin was prepared in dimethylsulfoxide
(Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and diluted to the working concentration (10 µM ionomycin) in recording solution under conditions in
which the final concentration of solvent was <0.1%. Finally,
4-aminopyridine (4-AP; Aldrich, Milwaukee, WI) was used at 1 mM in the recording solution.
RESULTS
To examine the possibility that transmitter release fails in
csp mutant preparations because of a lack of recycled
synaptic vesicles, we set out to investigate whether releasable quanta persist in csp mutant nerve endings at nonpermissive
temperature. Moreover, because ts shibire mutant
Drosophila are known to be defective in the recycling of
synaptic vesicles (Poodry and Edgar, 1979
; Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
), we
were interested in comparing the behavior of csp and
shibire mutant organisms under similar experimental
conditions. As shown in Figure
1A, both csp
and shibire mutant Drosophila display a complete
loss of nerve impulse-evoked transmitter release at nonpermissive
temperature. For csp mutants, as reported previously (Umbach
et al., 1994
), this transmission block develops slowly (over 10-20
min) and occurs independently of any efforts to evoke quantal
transmitter secretion. However, to achieve the ts block of transmitter
release in shibire mutants (as illustrated in Fig.
1A), it is necessary first to deplete the nerve
endings of their preformed store of quanta by enhancing quantal
transmitter release (which was done in this experiment using elevated K
solution; Fig. 1A). Clearly, this conditional block
of transmitter release (which requires enhanced activity in
shibire) is one phenotypic difference between csp
and shibire mutant Drosophila. Once depleted of
releasable quanta by the high-K solution, no further evoked response
can be recorded in shibire mutants in normal recording
solution at nonpermissive temperature (Fig. 1A).
Nevertheless, both shibire and csp mutant
Drosophila recover evoked responses after being returned to
permissive temperature (21°C, Fig. 1A). Thus, in
both of these mutants the ts block of transmitter release is reversible
with cooling.
Fig. 1.
Response of wild-type and mutant preparations to
nerve stimulation and
-Ltx at permissive and nonpermissive
temperatures. A, Nerve impulse-evoked ejps in the
standard recording solution in wild-type (WT) and
csp (CSP) and shibire
(Shi) mutant preparations at permissive (21°C) and
after 15 min at nonpermissive (32°C) temperature. To obtain this ts
blockade of ejps in shibire mutants it was necessary to
pretreat the preparation in high-K solution until mejps ceased at
32°C. This was done by warming the preparation to 32°C and
incubating it for 15 min in high-K solution (see Materials and
Methods), followed by washing with normal recording solution. No such
treatment was needed for csp mutants, which were fully blocked after 10-15 min at 32°C. Shibire and
csp mutants recover ejps after 15 min at 21°C.
B, Effect of
-Ltx on mejp discharges in wild-type,
csp, and shibire mutant preparations at
permissive (21°C) and nonpermissive temperatures (32°C). Toxin (5 nM) was added at time 0, and representative mejp traces are
presented at selected intervals thereafter. Note that prolonged
exposure of wild-type larvae to 32°C often results in spontaneous
ejps seen as spikes in the bottom traces. This spiking
is not seen in csp or depleted shibire
preparations. Again, as in A, the shibire mutant preparation was depleted of releasable quanta at 32°C by exposure to high-K solution. Note that a similar pretreatment of
control or csp mutant preparations with high-K solution
did not alter the
-Ltx effect (data not shown). Data are
representative of results from a minimum of three experiments for each
condition.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Next, we evaluated the effect of
-Ltx on quantal transmitter release
in wild-type and mutant preparations at permissive and nonpermissive
temperatures. As indicated in Figure 1B, 5 nM
-Ltx triggers a sustained increase of mejp frequency
in wild-type preparations. This mejp cascade begins 3-5 min after bath
application of the toxin and lasts for at least 40 min (Fig.
1B). During the period of high mejp frequency, the
muscle fiber depolarizes, and individual mejps cannot be resolved (Fig.
1B). Because of this, we did not attempt to
quantitate mejp frequency during this quantal cascade. Instead, we
noted that with 5 nM
-Ltx, both the time of onset (3-5
min) and duration (40-50 min) of this period of enhanced mejp activity
were very consistent among wild-type preparations.
When
-Ltx is applied to a csp mutant preparation at
21°C, it induces a prompt (within 5 min) and sustained (>30 min)
increase in mejp frequency (Fig. 1B). Interestingly,
-Ltx triggers a similar response in csp mutants at 32°C
(Fig. 1B). In other words, at a time when nerve
impulses fail to elicit the discharge of a single quantum of
transmitter (Fig. 1A),
-Ltx induces a massive
burst of mejps (Fig. 1B). The onset and duration of
this increased mejp activity are indistinguishable from those of
wild-type controls (Fig. 1B). These results indicate
that csp mutant Drosophila retain a sizable pool
of quanta that can be released by
-Ltx but not by nerve
impulses.
Application of
-Ltx to shibire mutant preparations also
triggers a massive outpouring of quanta at 21°C (Fig.
1B). However, this situation changes in
shibire mutant preparations at nonpermissive temperature
(32°C). In shibire mutant preparations that have been depleted of vesicles at 32°C,
-Ltx fails to trigger any further detectable mejps (Fig. 1B). Indeed, in contrast to
csp mutant preparations that still show spontaneous mejps at
nonpermissive temperature (Fig. 1B; Umbach et al.,
1994
), one seldom (less than one per minute) detects mejps in these
depleted shibire preparations (Fig. 1B).
Although these latter results conform to expectations based on the
known depletion of synaptic vesicles in shibire mutants (Poodry and Edgar, 1979
), they also highlight the prominent difference in the effect of
-Ltx on a preparation with a known
membrane-recycling defect (the shibire mutants) and the
csp mutants. From these results, we conclude that the ts
block of transmitter release in csp mutants cannot be
attributed to a failure of synaptic vesicle recycling.
Based on the fact that quantal transmitter release can be elicited by
-Ltx in csp mutant preparations, it is necessary to consider other mechanisms to explain the failure of nerve impulses to
evoke transmitter release at restrictive temperature. The mechanisms that are consistent with the available data (see Discussion) are either
that presynaptic Ca channels fail to open or that Ca influx or action
is altered in some manner that precludes effective triggering of
transmitter secretion. To distinguish among these possibilities, we
conducted several additional experiments.
To minimize problems in obtaining stable recordings, we have generally
used bath solutions with a high ratio of Mg ions to Ca ions (Fig. 1;
Umbach et al., 1994
). Although this reduces muscle twitching in
response to nerve impulses (by keeping the quantal content low), it may
also accentuate problems with Ca ion triggering of transmitter release
in csp mutants at elevated temperature. Thus, our first
experiment was to raise the concentration of Ca ions in the bath
solution to determine whether this overcomes the blockade of synaptic
transmission in csp mutants. We found that increasing bath
Ca from 1 to 5 or 10 mM does not restore evoked responses
(data not shown). Thus, this expedient of increasing the
electrochemical gradient for Ca ion entry does not overcome the block
of transmitter release in csp mutants.
Our second strategy was to use solutions with an elevated K ion
concentration. As illustrated in Figure
2, in a csp mutant preparation
that fails to release any transmitter in response to nerve stimulation,
high-K solution is also without any detectable effect on quantal
transmitter secretion. In n = 3 experiments, mejp
frequency at restrictive temperature was 1.7 ± 0.2/sec (mean ± SD) before high K and 1.6 ± 0.1/sec (mean ± SD) during
high K. Thus, there is no significant change of mejp frequency in
csp mutants at elevated temperatures. However, when the
preparation of Figure 2 is cooled back to room temperature, high K has
its characteristic effect (reported originally by Liley, 1956
) of dramatically enhancing mejp frequency. Indeed, mejp frequency rises to
a level that precludes accurate determination of the frequency. From
these results, we conclude that the transmitter release apparatus of
csp mutants is immune to the release triggering action of
high K solution at restrictive temperature.
Fig. 2.
Effect of high-K solution on quantal transmitter
release in a csp mutant preparation. A
csp mutant preparation was warmed to 32°C until nerve
impulse-evoked responses failed completely (as in Fig.
1A). The initial record (32°C normal
K) shows mejps that persist under these circumstances.
The bath solution was then replaced with high-K solution (32°C
high K), and mejp frequency was not detectably altered.
(However, the membrane potential dropped from
45 to
28 mV.) When
this preparation was cooled back to 22°C for 15 min, one sees a large
increase in mejp frequency (22°C high K),
although the membrane potential of the muscle fiber remains depolarized
(at
27 mV).
[View Larger Version of this Image (12K GIF file)]
Another approach that has been very effective at potentiating
neurotransmitter release is to use 4-AP (e.g., see Heuser et al., 1979
;
Katz and Miledi, 1979
). Again, we were interested in whether 4-AP would
overcome the blockade of stimulus-evoked transmitter release in
csp mutants at 32°C. The results in Figure
3 indicate that 4-AP is ineffectual in
this context. In a preparation that fails to respond to nerve impulses
at 32°C, we see no restoration of quantal secretion in the presence
of 4-AP (1 mM). Interestingly, even after removing the 4-AP
from the bath solution and cooling this preparation back to room
temperature, we routinely detected a large and protracted ejp in
response to nerve stimulation (compare ejps at 21°C in Fig. 3,
top and bottom). Note that we also tested 4-AP
with elevated Ca (5 mM) solution and saw no relief of the transmission block in csp mutants (data not shown). These
results indicate that 4-AP potentiates transmitter secretion in
csp mutants at permissive temperature but not at
nonpermissive temperature.
Fig. 3.
Effect of 4-AP on quantal transmitter release in a
csp mutant preparation. A ts block of evoked transmitter
release was obtained in a csp mutant preparation (as in Fig.
1A). 4-AP was added after verifying the block of
evoked release at 32°C (note the absence of evoked response at
32°C;
4AP). No recovery of evoked responses was
seen with 4-AP (+ 4AP) at 32°C. However, if one cools
the 4-AP-treated preparation to 21°C, one detects the protracted ejp associated with the action of this K channel blocker. Comparable results were obtained in three experiments.
[View Larger Version of this Image (7K GIF file)]
Elevated Ca, high-K solution, and 4-AP are all treatments that should
potentiate transmitter release only if presynaptic Ca channels are
capable of opening and conducting Ca ions. This is illustrated in
Figure 4, which shows that Cd ions, which
are nonselective blockers of all known voltage-gated Ca channels (Tsien
et al., 1988
), completely antagonize the release-enhancing effect of
elevated Ca, high-K solution, or 4-AP on quantal transmitter release in wild-type controls at 21-22°C. (Note that these data also illustrate the release-enhancing effect of these treatments in control
preparations.) Because of these results, it appeared plausible that the
inability of these treatments to overcome the failure of quantal
secretion in csp mutants might owe to an inhibition in these
organisms of presynaptic Ca channels. If this were the case, we
postulated that it should be possible to circumvent these channels and
to trigger a flurry of mejps using the Ca ionophore ionomycin.
Fig. 4.
Cadmium ion antagonism of the release-enhancing
effects of high-Ca solution, high-K solution, or 4-AP in wild-type
preparations at 21-22°C. In these experiments, the initial record in
A-C is the control situation before
addition of: A, high-Ca solution; B,
high-K solution; and C, 4-AP. The second record in each
series shows the release-enhancing effect of each of these treatments. The third record indicates what happens when 1 mM Cd is
added to the bath solution. In A and C,
we measured evoked responses, whereas in high K
(B), only spontaneous events were recorded. In
our experience, 1 mM Cd not only abolished the
stimulus-evoked responses in A and C, but
it also considerably reduced mejp frequency in this preparation, as
indicated in B.
[View Larger Version of this Image (11K GIF file)]
In our initial experiments using ionomycin, we encountered the
unexpected difficulty that this ionophore efficiently raised mejp
frequency at 22°C, but it became appreciably less effective in
raising mejp frequency at temperatures >30°C. This effect was obtained in six different wild-type preparations. However, we also
noticed that this temperature effect was rapidly reversible, and as
ionomycin-treated preparations were cooled, mejp frequency increased
dramatically. Thus, it appears that the Ca-transporting activity of
ionomycin may be altered in Drosophila membranes at >30°C. [We drew this conclusion because normal, nerve
impulse-evoked responses could still be obtained at 30°C in
wild-type, ionophore-treated larvae, which indicates that the
transmitter release apparatus is not compromised (data not shown).]
Because of this behavior of the ionophore, our studies using
csp mutants were designed to assess the action of ionophore
during a brief period of cooling from 32°C. As indicated (Fig.
5), heating to 32°C produces the typical block of evoked responses. In Figure 5, third panel,
ionomycin was added, and the preparation was cooled to 29°C. With
this cooling, mejp frequency increases to a level that precludes
accurate counting. What is important is that there is no recovery of
nerve impulse-evoked responses at the same time that ionomycin is
promoting this mejp discharge (Fig. 5) [Interestingly, we used this
same paradigm using high-K solution and saw no increase in mejp
frequency within 5 min of cooling at 29°C (data not shown).] Under
normal circumstances, when we cool a csp mutant preparation
from 30-32°C back to 21-22°C, it takes at least 5 min for a full
recovery of evoked responses (Umbach et al., 1994
). This means that
when cooling to 29°C, we have a several minute window before evoked
responses show any recovery, and this allows us to gauge the effect of
ionomycin on mejp frequency before ejps begin to reappear. Finally,
this release-enhancing effect of Ca ionophore is not seen if Ca in the
bath solution is replaced with Mg (data not shown). Thus, Ca ionophore
does circumvent the block of transmitter release in ts csp
mutants, and it does so by facilitating Ca entry across the plasma
membrane.
Fig. 5.
Action of ionomycin on a csp mutant
preparation. In the top (21°C), mejps
(first two traces) and the ejp are shown in a
csp mutant preparation at permissive temperature. The
characteristic failure of the ejp, but not the mejps, is illustrated in
the center (32°C). Finally, the effect
of ionomycin to increase dramatically the frequency of mejps is shown
in the bottom (29°C). At this time, the
evoked response remains inhibited (final record), indicating that
ionomycin promotes quantal secretion (mejps) at a time when evoked
responses (ejps) are blocked. This result is representative of data
obtained in three separate experiments.
[View Larger Version of this Image (11K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
Two important conclusions emerge from this investigation. First,
our data show that the failure of synaptic transmission in csp mutant larvae is not caused by a defect in synaptic
vesicle recycling. Second, our results support the conclusion that csps regulate an early step in the Ca-dependent triggering of quantal transmitter secretion. We begin by reviewing evidence germane to the
recycling issue and follow this with arguments in favor of the
hypothesis that this "early step" in the secretory cascade involves
a regulatory interaction between csps and presynaptic Ca channels.
The idea that csps are involved in synaptic vesicle recycling (Sudhof,
1995
) fails to account for the inhibition of transmitter secretion in
csp mutants at restrictive temperature. In contrast to
shibire mutant Drosophila, which are defective in
dynamin, a protein that is important for clathrin-dependent membrane
recycling (Poodry and Edgar, 1979
; Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
; Chen et al., 1991
; van der Bliek and Meyerowitz, 1991
), csp mutants
retain abundant releasable quanta at a time when nerve impulses fail to
elicit any quantal transmitter release. This is one of many pointed
contrasts between these two mutant strains. For instance, we have shown
that transmitter release is eliminated in csp mutants without any prerequisite for a period of enhanced quantal secretion. The situation is quite different in shibire larvae, where a
period of quantal release activity is necessary to produce the loss of releasable quanta and morphologically identifiable synaptic vesicles (Poodry and Edgar, 1979
; Kosaka and Ikeda, 1983
). Thus, in the current
experiments, we used solutions with elevated K ions to deplete
shibire nerve terminals of preformed vesicles. Subsequently, these shibire mutants showed almost no detectable
spontaneous mejp activity at restrictive temperature, whereas
csp mutant larvae continued to display mejps. These
phenotypic traits distinguish these two mutant strains and force us to
consider other hypotheses (than a loss of synaptic vesicles) to explain
the inhibition of synaptic transmission in csp mutants at
32°C.
By a process of elimination, we can infer from the available data that
Ca influx via presynaptic Ca channels is attenuated in csp
mutants at nonpermissive temperatures. This reasoning begins with the
-Ltx and ionomycin results. Thus, even when nerve impulses fail to
trigger the release of a single quantum of transmitter, both of these
reagents elicit a sustained discharge of mejps at csp mutant
nerve terminals. With
-Ltx, we followed this cascade of mejps for
>30 min. These results unambiguously demonstrate that there is no
insurmountable barrier to the ongoing recruitment of synaptic vesicles
to participate in the release process in these mutants. [As an
interesting counterpoint, Broadie et al. (1995)
showed that
Drosophila strains that are defective in syntaxin or
synaptobrevin are resistant to the release-promoting effects of an
extract of black widow spider venom glands.] Instead, our data argue
that there is a disruption of the normal process that couples nerve
impulses to transmitter release in csp mutants.
Physiologically, nerve impulses evoke the release of neurotransmitter
by the depolarization-dependent opening of presynaptic Ca channels
(Katz, 1969
; Augustine et al., 1987
). Ca ions entering via these
channels bind to "Ca sensors" (presumed to include members of the
synaptotagmin family; see Sudhof, 1995
; Augustine et al., 1996
) to
trigger the final sequence of steps leading to the exocytotic discharge
of transmitter. Because action potential conduction into the terminal
is unaffected in csp mutants (Umbach et al., 1994
), the ts
failure of secretion must reflect a defect at some later stage of the
release-coupling process. There are four general explanations that
could account for this failure of excitation-secretion coupling.
First, if Ca influx is attenuated, then the defect lies in the
operation of the Ca channels that normally (i.e., at permissive temperature) participate in the triggering of transmitter release. However, if the pathways for Ca entry remain unaltered (relative to
what occurs at permissive temperature), then transmitter release may
fail for one of the following three reasons: (1) Ca buffering (or
extrusion) is so efficient that it precludes triggering of exocytosis;
(2) release sites become physically dissociated from sites of Ca entry
to the extent that release coupling fails; and (3) the Ca sensors for
exocytosis are defective. Although the available data do not permit us
to distinguish unequivocally among these possibilities, we review
evidence that favors the hypothesis that Ca channel function is altered
in ts csp mutants.
A facile interpretation of the ionomycin data is that this ionophore
bypasses dysfunctional Ca channels in the csp mutants and
provides an alternative pathway for Ca entry that is adequate to
trigger high-frequency mejp discharges. The fact that ionomycin promotes quantal transmitter release, whereas solutions with high K,
high Ca, or 4-AP do not, is also consistent with this interpretation. These latter three treatments all demand that presynaptic Ca channels be capable of opening and conducting Ca ions as a prelude to the release-triggering process. The finding that none of these treatments elicit any detectable secretion at nonpermissive temperature in csp mutants is consistent with the hypothesis that the
target Ca channels are dysfunctional.
A more systematic approach to interpreting the release data for
csp mutants is to assume that the presynaptic Ca channels remain functional and to ask whether any of the three alternative explanations (1-3, above) can account for the observed results. First,
is it plausible that enhanced buffering or extrusion of Ca ions would
interfere with release evoked by nerve impulses or high K without also
blunting secretion triggered by ionomycin [or
-Ltx, which appears
to act at least in part by raising cytosolic ionized Ca (Meldolesi et
al., 1986
; Surkova, 1994
)]? If the buffering and extrusion hypothesis
were valid, there should have been a demonstrable attenuation of the
release-triggering effect of ionomycin or
-Ltx. [Supporting this
assumption are preliminary results showing that the action of
-Ltx
to enhance quantal secretion is diminished in Drosophila
larvae pretreated with the permeant Ca chelator BAPTA-AM (J. Umbach,
unpublished observation).] Because ionomycin and
-Ltx displayed
similar efficacy as secretogogues in wild-type and csp
mutant preparations, this makes it unlikely that Ca buffering or
extrusion changes in the mutants.
Second, we can inquire whether a physical separation of release sites
from the sites of Ca entry underlies the ts block of release in
csp mutants. If this situation existed, one might predict that ionomycin [and
-Ltx, if it can act as a mobile Ca ionophore (see Meldolesi et al., 1986
; Surkova, 1994
)] should provide
sufficiently diffuse Ca ion entry to trigger release in these
organisms. However, if this were the case, it is a challenge to explain
why
-Ltx and ionomycin promote such a dramatic increase in mejp
frequency, whereas sustained depolarization by high K and nerve
stimulation in 4-AP are completely ineffectual at triggering secretion.
Thus, although our data do not favor this explanation, we cannot
completely exclude it at this time.
The third alternative to explain the ts failure of secretion in
csp mutants is that the Ca-sensing machinery fails to
trigger exocytosis. Here again, we regard it as somewhat arbitrary to assume that ionomycin (or
-Ltx) can overcome a defect at this level,
whereas nerve impulses or high K cannot. Thus, it remains that the most
parsimonious explanation of our data is that presynaptic Ca channels
fail in a temperature-dependent manner in csp mutant larvae.
The last argument in favor of a csp-Ca channel link stems from
physiological results obtained during the initial cloning of a
vertebrate csp cDNA (Gundersen and Umbach, 1992
). In these studies, csp
antisense RNA selectively reduced (or abolished) N-type Ca channel
currents recorded in frog oocytes injected with Torpedo electric lobe mRNA. Conversely, csp sense RNA augmented N-type Ca
channel currents. Although the molecular basis of these observations has not been established, we now know that csps are synaptic vesicle proteins that are tethered to the vesicle surface in an orientation that allows them to interact directly or indirectly with presynaptic Ca
channels (Mastrogiacomo et al., 1994
; Umbach et al., 1995
). This
precedent for a csp-Ca channel link supports our conclusion that the
remnants of this regulatory interaction fail in csp mutant Drosophila, leading to the ts block of secretion.
FOOTNOTES
Received April 29, 1997; revised July 7, 1997; accepted July 10, 1997.
This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grant
NS31934 (J.A.U.). We thank Dr. A. Grasso and Dr. A. Mastrogiacomo for
the
-latrotoxin and Theresa Sama for preparing this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Joy Umbach, Department of
Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, University of California at Los
Angeles School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1735.
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