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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 1998, 18(9):3147-3157
Calcium-Dependent Regulation of Rab3 in Short-Term Plasticity
Frédéric
Doussau1,
Aude
Clabecq2,
Jean-Pierre
Henry2,
François
Darchen2, and
Bernard
Poulain1
1 Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Cellulaire, UPR 9009, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, F-67084 Strasbourg Cedex,
France, and 2 Service de Neurobiologie Physico-Chimique,
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, ERS 575, Institut de
Biologie Physico-Chimique, F-75005 Paris, France
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ABSTRACT |
The Rab3 proteins are monomeric GTP-binding proteins associated
with secretory vesicles. In their active GTP-bound state, Rab3 proteins
are involved in the regulation of hormone secretion and
neurotransmitter release. This action is thought to involve specific
effectors, including two Ca2+-binding proteins,
Rabphilin and Rim. Rab3 acts late in the exocytotic process, in a cell
domain in which the intracellular Ca2+ concentration
is susceptible to rapid changes. Therefore, we examined the possible
Ca2+-dependency of the regulatory action of
GTP-bound Rab3 and wild-type Rab3 on neuroexocytosis at identified
cholinergic synapses in Aplysia californica. The effects
of recombinant GTPase-deficient Aplysia-Rab3
(apRab3-Q80L) or wild-type apRab3 were studied on evoked acetylcholine
release. Intraneuronal application of apRab3-Q80L in identified neurons
of the buccal ganglion of Aplysia led to inhibition of
neurotransmission; wild-type apRab3 was less effective. Intracellular
chelation of Ca2+ ions by EGTA greatly potentiated
the inhibitory action of apRab3-Q80L. Train and paired-pulse
facilitation, two Ca2+-dependent forms of short-term
plasticity induced by a rise in intraterminal Ca2+
concentration, were increased after injection of apRab3-Q80L. This
result suggests that the inhibition exerted by GTP-bound Rab3 on
neuroexocytosis is reduced during transient augmentations of
intracellular Ca2+ concentration. Therefore, a
Ca2+-dependent modulation of GTP-bound Rab3 function
may contribute to short-term plasticity.
Key words:
Aplysia; synapse; synaptic vesicle exocytosis; neurotransmitter release mechanism; Rab3; facilitation; post-tetanic
potentiation; synaptic plasticity
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INTRODUCTION |
Neurotransmitter release involves
Ca2+-triggered exocytosis of synaptic vesicle
contents. Despite recent progress, the molecular events underlying this
physiological process have not yet been deciphered (for review, see
Südhof, 1995 ; Calakos and Scheller, 1996 ; Matthews, 1996 ; Zucker,
1996 ). Rab3 is implicated in the regulation of
Ca2+-dependent hormone and neurotransmitter
exocytosis (Lledo et al., 1993 ; Geppert et al., 1994 , 1997 ; Holz et
al., 1994 ; Johannes et al., 1994 , 1996 ; Regazzi et al., 1996 ; Weber et
al., 1996 ; Nonet et al., 1997 ); however, its role is still
unresolved.
Rab3 is a small G-protein of the Rab/Ypt1/Sec4 family that is highly
conserved in all eukaryotes and is implicated in intracellular vesicle
transport and fusion with target membranes (Novick and Zerial, 1997 ;
Südhof, 1997 ). Rab3 proteins are strongly expressed in
neuroendocrine cells and neurons, where they are specifically localized
on secretory granules and synaptic vesicles (Darchen et al., 1990 ,
1995 ; Fischer von Mollard, 1990 , 1991 , 1994 ; Regazzi et al., 1996 ). In
the cytosol, Rab3 is bound to GDP, whereas on the vesicle, Rab3 is
mostly in the GTP-bound state. When Rab3 is bound to GTP, it is in an
active form, and Rab3 can be complexed with its effectors Rabphilin
(Shirataki et al., 1992 ; McKiernan et al., 1993 ; Li et al., 1994 ), Rim
(Wang et al., 1997 ), or the prenylated-Rab acceptor PRA1 (Martincic et
al., 1997 ). When exocytosis is stimulated, GTP is hydrolyzed and
GDP-bound Rab3 dissociates from the vesicle membrane (Fisher von
Mollard, 1991 , 1994 ; Stahl et al., 1994 ).
Several steps in the exocytotic process are regulated by
Ca2+ ions in the micromolar range, which is far
below the concentration required to trigger vesicle fusion (Bittner and
Holz, 1992 ; Hsu et al., 1996 ). However, the identity of the proteins
involved in these steps is still unknown. The regulatory function of
Rab3 in exocytosis involves several targets, including Rabphilin and Rim. Both of these proteins possess two C2 domains, allowing their binding to phospholipids in the presence of micromolar
Ca2+ (Yamaguchi et al., 1993 ; Wang et al., 1997 ).
Our previous work at Aplysia synapses indicated that part of
Rab3 action seems to intervene after the docking of synaptic vesicles
at release sites (Johannes et al., 1996 ). Moreover, at hippocampal
excitatory CA1 synapses, Rab3A acts downstream from the
Ca2+-sensitive step that regulates quantal release
probability (Geppert et al., 1997 ). These observations suggest that
Rab3 action occurs in a cell domain in which the intracellular
concentration of Ca2+
([Ca2+]i) is susceptible to
rapid changes. Therefore, the aim of this work was to examine the
Ca2+ dependency of the regulatory action of the
active GTP-bound state of Rab3 on neuroexocytosis at identified
synapses in Aplysia. We used a GTPase-deficient recombinant
Aplysia-Rab3 (apRab3-Q80L) that is incorporated in the Rab3
cycle (Johannes et al., 1996 ). The intracellular actions of apRab3-Q80L
and wild-type apRab3 on acetylcholine (ACh) release were examined under
conditions in which [Ca2+]i was
modified. The inhibitory action of apRab3-Q80L was greatly potentiated
when [Ca2+]i was decreased. Moreover,
our data suggest that part of paired-pulse or train facilitation can be
accounted for by a transient removal of the negative clamp exerted by
GTP-Rab3 on neuroexocytosis.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Electrical recordings. All experiments were performed
at 22°C at identified synapses in dissected buccal ganglia of
Aplysia californica (100-150 gm body weight) (Marinus
Inc.). In this ganglion, two presynaptic neurons, B4 and B5, make well
characterized cholinergic chloride-dependent inhibitory synapses with
the same set of postsynaptic cells that includes B3, B6, and other
neurons (Gardner, 1971 ). During the experiments, both B4 and B5
presynaptic cells (100-150 µm in diameter) and one postsynaptic
neuron, either B3 or B6 (150-200 µm in diameter), were impaled with
two glass microelectrodes (3 M KCl;
Ag/AgCl2; 4-10 M for presynaptic neurons, 1.5-3
M for postsynaptic neurons). ACh release was evoked by an action
potential and monitored by measuring the amplitude of evoked
postsynaptic response. Each evoked postsynaptic response was recorded
as a membrane current (Im) change
(chloride dependent) using a conventional two-electrode voltage-clamp
technique (Gene Clamp 500 or AxoClamp2B, Axon Instruments, Foster City,
CA). The postsynaptic membrane current was filtered at a cutoff
frequency of 250 Hz using an eight-pole low-pass bessel filter (902LPS,
Frequency Device) before acquisition. The null potential for
Cl could be modified during the experiments
because low-resistance KCl-containing microelectrodes for clamping the
postsynaptic neuron were used. To express the amplitude of the
postsynaptic response as a value proportional to the amount of released
ACh, but independent of the driving force for Cl ,
the amplitude of the postsynaptic response Im
was subsequently converted as an apparent membrane conductance
(Gm) by taking into account the reversal
potential Vrev of the evoked response
(Vrev = ECl for these
responses) (Simonneau et al., 1980 ) according to the equation
Gm = Im/(Vh Vrev). The reversal potential
(Vrev) of the postsynaptic response was
determined every 5 min. To measure accurately the amplitude of the
postsynaptic response, the holding potential Vhr
was maintained 30 mV above Vrev.
Stimulation of ACh release. During the experiments, each of
the presynaptic neurons was depolarized over the threshold of action
potential initiation by a square pulse of 50 msec duration and the
appropriate intensity. The frequency of stimulation was one stimulus
every 40 sec, a condition that allowed stable recordings for at least 8 hr. Note that to avoid superpositioning the postsynaptic responses
issuing from either B4 or B5 neurons, the stimulus protocols were
alternated every 20 sec. When train or paired-pulse facilitation was
studied, the stimulation protocol was changed as described below.
Paired-pulse and train facilitation. The term
"facilitation" (Mallart and Martin, 1967 ) denotes the extent of
increase in amplitude of a test response after a conditioning stimulus
as compared with the conditioning response. To study paired-pulse facilitation, two brief depolarizing pulses of 5-20 msec (depending on
the cell excitability) separated by a repolarizing phase of 15-200
msec were generated (SMP-311 pulse generator; Bio-Logic) and applied to
the presynaptic neuron. In paired-pulse facilitation protocols, the
interval between two presynaptic action potentials was calculated as
the delay between the peaks of the paired action potentials. As
described by Mallart and Martin (1967) , facilitation F was
calculated from the equation F = (i2 i1)/i1, with i1 being the amplitude of
the conditioning response and i2 that of the test
response.
Determination of i2. At the cholinergic synapses
used in this study, the mean decay time of the evoked postsynaptic
responses recorded at 22°C varies from 11 to 23 msec depending on the
postsynaptic cell and the preparation. Moreover, in ~20% of the
postsynaptic cells, the decay of the evoked postsynaptic responses was
better fitted by a biexponential (with 1 ~9-15 msec and 2
~20-50 msec). It is possible that this corresponds to the two
distinct time-opening durations reported for the postsynaptic chloride
channels activated by ACh at these synapses (Simonneau et
al., 1980 ; Fossier et al., 1983 ). Due to their long decay time, the
postsynaptic responses evoked by a pair of stimuli overlapped partially
at short interpulse intervals. Thus, the amplitude measured at the peak
of response 2 was the sum of the actual amplitude of response 2 (i2)
and the residual of response 1. i2 was calculated by deducing the
extrapolated residual amplitude of response 1 at the time of the peak
of response 2 and assuming a biexponential decay following the equation
i2 ~ ipeak2 i1(a.e t/ 1 + b.e t/ 2), where t was the time
interval between peak of response 2 and peak of response 1 (i.e.,
approximate interpulse time interval), 1 and 2 were the decay
times, and a and b (with a + b = 1) were the respective weights of the two
exponentials. 1, 2, a, and b were
calculated in each experimental condition from several postsynaptic
responses evoked by a single action potential. Note that when a
monoexponential decay time was found, b = 0.
Stimulation. Because of the high variability of paired-pulse
facilitation at these synapses, determination of mean paired-pulse facilitation was calculated from at least 25 paired-pulse evoked responses for the same interpulse time interval. Because ACh release was not stable at higher stimulation frequencies, the delay between two
subsequent paired pulses was maintained at 40 sec.
Calculation of facilitation during a train of stimuli. When
required, trains of action potentials with an interpulse of 20 msec
were elicited (50 Hz train). Facilitation was determined only in short
trains of eight action potentials. Calculation of the actual amplitude
of the responses in the train was made via a procedure similar to that
used for calculation of paired-pulse facilitation but extended to the
residuals of the three preceding responses in the train. Facilitation
of response x was determined by comparing the amplitude of
response x with that of the initial response of the train:
F = (ix i1)/i1. Because
repetitions of short stimulation trains also induced post-tetanic
potentiation, these trains were elicited only every 35 min, during
control or after stabilization of Rab3-induced modification of
release.
Post-tetanic potentiation. To initiate post-tetanic
potentiation (PTP), three trains of action potentials (1.5 sec at 50 Hz) were produced at 5 sec intervals. Then, the stimulation rate was returned to control conditions. In each episode, the amplitude of PTP
was determined as the mean of three subsequent postsynaptic responses
measured at the peak of the potentiation; then it was normalized
against the mean amplitude of the 10 postsynaptic responses preceding
the tetanus.
Extracellular media. Dissected buccal ganglia were
maintained at 22°C using a Peltier-plate system and superfused
continuously (10 ml/hr) with a physiological medium containing NaCl
(460 mM), KCl (10 mM), CaCl2 (33 mM), MgCl2 (50 mM),
MgSO4 (28 mM), Tris Buffer (10 mM),
pH 7.5. This di-cation-rich medium, termed "control medium," was
used to diminish spontaneous neuron firing activity and thus to
minimize fluctuations in evoked ACh release. In this way, analysis of
the kinetics of Rab3 action could be performed more easily. To change
[Ca2+]e, the extracellular
[Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio was
modified by changing the concentrations of CaCl2 and MgCl2 but not of MgSO4 to keep the sulfates
unmodified. The [Ca2+]/[Mg2+]
ratio was defined as Q = [CaCl2]/([MgCl2] + [MgSO4]).
In the control physiological medium, Q is ~0.42. Changes
in the Ca2+/Mg2+ ratio were made
to avoid (1) an osmotic pressure change that could affect
neurotransmission (for review, see Van der Kloot and Molgó,
1994 ), (2) a change in the transmembrane Cl
gradient because the recorded postsynaptic responses are
Cl dependent (Simonneau et al., 1980 ; Fossier et
al., 1983 ), and (3) a change in the concentration of divalent cations
because they can affect presynaptic excitability. The concentrations of [CaCl2] and [MgCl2] were calculated
according to the following equations: [CaCl2]
(mM) = Q · (83 + [MgSO4])/(Q + 1) and [MgCl2] (mM) = 83 [CaCl2], with Q
being the [Ca2+]/[Mg2+]
ratio.
The [Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratios of
0.14 and 0.21 used for several experiments correspond to, respectively,
CaCl2 = 13.6 mM, MgCl2 = 69.4 mM and CaCl2 = 19.3 mM, and
MgCl2 =63.7 mM. Note that in Aplysia hemolymph, [Ca2+]/[Mg2+] is
~0.21.
Intracellular Ca2+ changes. To modify the
intracellular concentration of Ca2+ ions, EGTA was
applied intraneuronally by pressure injection (see below). To avoid
possible intracellular pH changes when Ca2+ binds to
EGTA, the chelator was prepared in Tris-buffer, pH 7.4, with an
excess of Tris (stock solution containing EGTA 100 mM, Tris 200 mM, pH 7.4).
Intraneuronal injection procedure. Injection electrodes were
pulled from glass tubing without a capillary (0.5-1.5 M ). Then, the
injection electrodes were coated with paraffin oil (Prolabo). This
procedure was found to greatly facilitate the removal of the injection
electrodes after intracellular injections were made. In addition, the
injection electrodes contained a silver wire (50 µm in diameter,
plunging into the solution to be injected) that allowed the
electrophysiological monitoring of the impalement. They were filled
with FC-77 (3M, Minneapolis, MN), an inert fluorocarbon compound that
prevented desiccation of the sample to be contained in the tips of the
injection electrodes. Before their intraneuronal injection, recombinant
apRab3-Q80L or wild-type apRab3 proteins or EGTA-Tris solutions were
mixed with a vital dye [10% v/v; fast green FCF (Sigma, St. Louis,
MO), dissolved at near saturation in distilled water]. The tip of the
injection microelectrode was filled by suction. When sequential
injections were required, the first sample to be injected was mixed
with 5% dye and the second with 20% dye. The samples were air
pressure-injected using a picopump PV820 (WPI Ltd.) under visual and
electrophysiological monitoring. The injected volume was in the range
of 1% of that of the cell body. Hence, assuming a homogenous
distribution of the injected material within the neuron arborization,
the intracellular concentration reached after injection should be in
the range of 1% of that into the injection micropipette. After
injection, the injection micropipette was removed. After intracellular
injection, only neurons with membrane potentials of 60 to 45 mV and
with no alterations in the action potentials were considered. Note that
intracellular administration of buffer solution used to prepare Rab3
protein produced no changes in transmitter release.
Other procedures. Construction, expression, and purification
of the recombinant wild-type Aplysia Rab3 (wild-type apRab3) and GTPase-deficient Aplysia Rab3Q80L (apRab3-Q80L) were
described previously (Johannes et al., 1996 ). When appropriate, data
are presented as mean ± SD. Statistical significance of the data
were calculated by paired or unpaired t tests.
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RESULTS |
Decreases in intracellular [Ca2+] potentiate
the inhibition of ACh release induced by a constitutively GTP-bound
Rab3
It is generally believed that the GTP-binding protein Rab3 is in
the "on" state when bound to GTP. Only the GTP-bound Rab3 is found
associated with synaptic vesicles, and this Rab3 form interacts with
downstream effectors. Therefore, in this study, we have used a
recombinant GTPase-deficient Aplysia Rab3 to probe the
function of GTP-bound Rab3 at identified synapses in
Aplysia. This mutated recombinant protein was generated by a
Q > L substitution at position 80 in the
sequence of Aplysia Rab3 and is referred to as apRab3-Q80L
in the text and as Q80L in the figures. After the control level of
evoked ACh release was determined, purified apRab3-Q80L was
pressure-injected into one presynaptic cell. The concentration of
apRab3-Q80L in the pipette was 30-80 µM, and the final
intracellular concentration was estimated to be in the range of
~0.3-0.8 µM. Simultaneously, transmitter release from another noninjected neuron was monitored to control the stability of
release. In contrast to control neurons, evoked release from the
apRab3-Q80L-injected neurons was progressively inhibited (a typical
experiment is shown in Fig. 1). The mean
inhibition, calculated 3 hr after injection, was 35.8 ± 14.9%
(n = 17), in agreement with our previous results using
a recombinant human/aplysia Rab3 chimera (Johannes et al., 1996 ).
Because of the low solubility of apRab3-Q80L, it was not possible to
test whether higher concentrations of this mutated protein could
further inhibit neuroexocytosis.

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Figure 1.
Inhibition of evoked acetylcholine release by
recombinant GTPase-deficient Aplysia-Rab3.
A, ACh release was evoked at identified synapses in the
buccal ganglion of Aplysia californica. Postsynaptic
response amplitude (%) is plotted against time (after injection).
After the control recording was made, recombinant
Aplysia-Rab3 deficient in its GTPase activity
(apRab3-Q80L, abbreviated as Q80L in the figure) was
pressure-injected into one of the two presynaptic cholinergic neurons
(see inset for a schematic drawing of the neuronal
connections). The final concentration of apRab3-Q80L was ~0.3-0.5
µM in the cell body; the other presynaptic neuron ( )
was kept for internal control of release stability. B,
Recordings of presynaptic action potentials (a)
and postsynaptic responses (b), before and after
injection of apRab3-Q80L. Note that amplitude of postsynaptic response
is expressed as a change in postsynaptic conductance (nS). For further
details see experimental procedures.
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To determine whether the GTP-bound Rab3 inhibitory action is
Ca2+ dependent, the intracellular free
Ca2+ concentration was changed by injecting a
Ca2+ chelator. EGTA was used because it is believed
to be too slow to interfere with the transient Ca2+
influx involved in the triggering of neurotransmitter exocytosis (Alder
et al., 1991 ). A mixture of EGTA-Tris buffer, pH 7.4, was pressure-injected into presynaptic neurons. When the concentration in
the pipette was increased (10-100 mM), the mean inhibition of evoked ACh release was also increased (Fig.
2A, and
inset). At an intraneuronal concentration of EGTA estimated
to be ~200 µM, ACh release was depressed by 64.2 ± 7.5% (n = 7). In all experiments, the inhibitory
effect of EGTA developed rapidly (Fig. 2A). This inhibition remained stable for at least 6 hr (Fig.
2A), even when the EGTA-containing micropipette was
removed 1 hr after the injection. Moreover, a subsequent injection of
CaCl2 into EGTA-injected neurons allowed a transient
recovery of ACh release (data not shown), and injection of Tris-buffer
alone (pH 7.4, >1 mM) did not modify neurotransmission
(data not shown) (also see Cornille et al., 1995 ). Hence, it is likely
that the block of ACh release that follows EGTA intracellular
application is caused by the lower [Ca2+]i that affects a
Ca2+-dependent step of the release process; however,
the sensitive step(s) remains undefined. At the cholinergic synapses
used for this study, the diffusional distance between the opened
Ca2+ channel(s) and the Ca2+
sensor involved in the triggering of the vesicle exocytosis is unknown.
As also observed at mammalian central synapses (Borst and Sakmann,
1996 ), it is possible that several Ca2+ channels
need to be open for each vesicle that undergoes exocytosis. Thus, we
cannot exclude the possibility that part of the EGTA-induced inhibition
of ACh release is attributable to the interception of a substantial
amount of Ca2+ ions before they bind to the
Ca2+-dependent trigger of exocytosis. On the other
hand, the EGTA-induced blockade of transmitter release might be also
attributable to its effect on one of the several
Ca2+-dependent steps preceding the triggering of the
secretory process (Bittner and Holz, 1992 ; Hsu et al., 1996 ).

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Figure 2.
Intracellular removal of Ca2+
increases apRab3-Q80L efficacy. All experiments were similar to that
described in Figure 1A. A, EGTA
mixed with Tris buffer, pH 7.4 (20/40 mM respective
concentrations in the injection pipette), was injected intracellularly
(arrow; ~1% of the cell body volume) giving rise to a
final intrasomatic [EGTA] of 200 µM.
Inset, Mean amplitude of postsynaptic responses as a
function of intraneuronal [EGTA] (±SD; n = 3-5). B, A typical experiment of three is shown. EGTA
was first injected (arrow) to give an intracellular
concentration of ~200 µM. After removal of the
injection micropipette and stabilization of the inhibition of evoked
release, a second micropipette containing apRab3-Q80L
(Q80L) was impaled. Then, apRab3-Q80L was
pressure-injected (arrow; ~0.3-0.5 µM
final in the soma). Inset, Typical recordings during the
experiment. C, Similar experiment as in B
but in the reversed order. After EGTA injection, note the typical
plateau (at ~20%) at which postsynaptic responses transiently
stabilized (it was seen in the 3 experiments performed).
D, Comparison of the mean release (±SD) observed 3 hr
after injection of EGTA-Tris alone (~200/400 µM final
intrasomatic concentration), apRab3-Q80L alone (~0.3-0.5
µM), or after sequential injection of both EGTA and
apRab3-Q80L, wild-type apRab3 (WT), alone
(~0.3-0.5 µM) or combined with EGTA. Significance: for
all comparisons, p < 0.001, except WT alone
(light gray bar) versus control, p < 0.01, and EGTA alone (white bar) versus WT + EGTA
(black bar), p > 0.2.
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Next, EGTA and apRab3-Q80L were sequentially injected. In the first set
of three experiments, EGTA-Tris, pH 7.4, was pressure-injected to
reach ~200 µM (final intracellular concentration);
then, after removal of the injection electrode and stabilization of
evoked release, apRab3-Q80L was pressure-injected into the same neuron. Under these conditions, a complete blockade of evoked ACh release was
observed within 3 hr after injection of the apRab3-Q80L (Fig. 2B-D). A similar observation was made when
apRab3-Q80L was injected before EGTA (Fig. 2C). The kinetics
of the apRab3-Q80L-induced blockade in neurons preinjected with EGTA
was not strikingly different from that observed in control neurons (for
instance, compare the onset of blockade in Fig. 2B
with that shown in Fig. 1A).
The combined effect of EGTA and apRab3-Q80L (35% mean inhibition by
apRab3-Q80L of the 25-40% remaining release after EGTA) had been
expected to stabilize the evoked release at one-fourth to one-fifth of
the initial value. Hence, the total blockade was unexpected and
indicates that EGTA potentiated the inhibitory effect of apRab3-Q80L. A
similar deduction was made from analyzing experiments in which
apRab3-Q80L was injected before the intracellular application of EGTA.
After the inhibition induced by apRab3-Q80L had stabilized (at ~20%
in this experiment), EGTA injection resulted in a very fast onset of
blockade followed by a period of nearly stable ACh release, as shown in
Figure 2C (a typical experiment from a series of three). The
initial level of blockade reached (~25% of that before EGTA) was in
the range of that expected by accumulation of the inhibition produced
by apRab3-Q80L and EGTA alone. Then, a second inhibitory phase of
blockade led to total inhibition. Most likely, this additional
inhibition reflects the potentiation of the inhibitory action of
apRab3-Q80L attributable to the chelation of intracellular
Ca2+. To summarize, the total inhibition observed
after sequential injection of EGTA and apRab3-Q80L suggests that the
intracellular action of GTP-bound Rab3 is Ca2+
dependent.
The weak inhibition of ACh release induced by injection of
wild-type apRab3 does not appear to be affected by a decrease in
intracellular [Ca2+]
The effect of apRab3-Q80L on evoked ACh release might be
attributable to either an increase in the levels of intraneuronal Rab3
or the replacement of a fraction of endogenous GTP-Rab3 (which cycles
freely between "on" and "off" forms) by a modified protein that
stays longer in the "on" state because of its reduced GTPase activity. To discriminate between these possibilities, we examined the
intraneuronal actions of recombinant wild-type apRab3. The experiments
were performed as described for apRab3-Q80L. When compared with
apRab3-Q80L, recombinant wild-type apRab3 was found to be much less
potent in altering neurotransmission. After its intraneuronal injection
(~0.3 µM, final), ACh release was slightly diminished
(to 88 ± 13%, 3 hr after injection; n = 13)
(Fig. 2D, light gray bar); in fact, no
inhibition was detectable in 5 of 13 experiments, whereas in three
experiments the extent of blockade was >20%. When a clear inhibition
was detected, the kinetics of blockade appeared to be similar to that
produced by apRab3-Q80L (data not shown). These results suggest that
for most of the neurons studied, the endogenous concentration of Rab3
is not a crucial factor limiting exocytosis. Next, the ability of EGTA
to modify the intracellular action of wild-type apRab3 was examined. In three experiments, wild-type apRab3 was injected first (~0.3
µM), and 3 hr later, EGTA (~200 µM) was
injected; in two experiments, EGTA was injected first, and after
stabilization of the responses, wild-type apRab3 was injected. Three
hours after the second injection, ACh release was found to be depressed
to 31% ± 6, n = 5, of its initial value (Fig.
2D). This value is comparable with that calculated by
combining the inhibitory action of wild-type apRab3 (inhibition to
88%) and that produced by EGTA (to 25-40%). Hence, the inhibitory action of recombinant wild-type apRab3 does not appear to be
particularly Ca2+ dependent.
The weak effect of recombinant wild-type apRab3 on ACh release suggests
that the levels of endogenous Rab3 are not limiting in the secretory
process, and that the effect of apRab3-Q80L on neurotransmission is
most likely attributable to its stabilization in the "on" state.
Note that because endogenous levels of Rab3 are not limiting, the lack
of apparent Ca2+ dependency of exogenous wild-type
apRab3, as compared with that of apRab3-Q80L, does not preclude the
possible Ca2+ dependency of endogenous Rab3
activity.
Train facilitation is increased after inhibition of transmitter
release by apRab3-Q80L
The physiological significance of the
Ca2+-dependent regulation of GTP-bound Rab3 effect
was investigated. It was tempting to speculate that in contrast to
intracellular Ca2+ buffering, any increase in
[Ca2+]i should reduce the inhibition
exerted by apRab3-Q80L on the exocytosis apparatus. Hence, we examined
train and paired-pulse facilitation. These synaptic plasticity
phenomena are known to be initiated by the transient augmentation of
the residual [Ca2+]i in the nerve
terminal after repeated stimulations at short time intervals (Katz and
Miledi, 1968 ; Swandulla et al., 1991 ; Kamiya and Zucker,
1994 ) (for review, see Zucker, 1989 , 1996 ). A first indication that
Rab3 action might be modulated by a rise in
[Ca2+]i was obtained by comparing the
facilitation of release observed during trains of repetitive action
potentials in the absence or presence of excess GTP-bound Rab3 (i.e.,
after stabilization of the apRab3-Q80L-induced inhibition of ACh
release). During the trains, facilitation was greatly increased after
apRab3-Q80L injection. Figure
3A shows a typical example
from a series of five experiments that exhibited a clear augmentation
of facilitation during a 50 Hz train of eight stimulations (by
27.2 ± 8.6%, at the eighth response; n = 5). The
potentiation was observed for the whole duration of the train (Fig.
3B), even when it was longer (tested up to 1.5 sec duration)
(Fig. 3C is a typical example). Taken together, our
experiments suggest that the negative clamp exerted by the GTP-bound
form of Rab3 is reduced by an increase in
[Ca2+]i. The kinetics of this
calcium-dependent modulation of Rab3 activity was assessed by examining
paired-pulse facilitation.

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Figure 3.
Evoked ACh release under repetitive stimulation is
potentiated after injection of apRab3-Q80L. A,
B, Trains of eight action potentials at 50 Hz were
elicited both in control conditions (control) and
after stabilization of the inhibition induced by apRab3-Q80L (+
Q80L). In this experiment, the inhibition induced by
apRab3-Q80L was 51%, 3 hr after injection. A shows the
superposition of two postsynaptic recordings made in these two
conditions; they were normalized against the amplitude of the first
response in the train. Recording in control condition is denoted by the
thick line. Vertical calibration (100% of first
response in the train): 485 nS (control, before injection of
apRab3-Q80L) and 250 nS (after injection of apRab3-Q80L and
stabilization of the inhibition). B, Facilitation was
determined for each of the eight stimulations in the train. In this
typical experiment from a series of five, the plot shows the averaged
facilitation values (mean ± SD; p < 0.001)
determined for six trains in the absence or the presence of
apRab3-Q80L. C, Effect of apRab3-Q80L on the
facilitation observed during a 1.5 sec train of action potentials at 50 Hz. Same presentation as in A. In this experiment, the
mean inhibition produced by apRab3-Q80L was 42%. Vertical calibration
(100% of first response in the train): 1020 nS (before injection) and
620 nS (after injection).
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Paired-pulse facilitation is increased after injection
of apRab3-Q80L
At the cholinergic synapse of the buccal ganglion, paired-pulse
facilitation was found to persist for more than 200 msec after a
conditioning pulse (a typical example is given in Fig.
4A). Although the
experiments were performed at the same identified synapses of the
buccal ganglion of Aplysia, the extent and dynamics of
facilitation were found to vary greatly from animal to animal. For most
of the synapses tested (23 of 43 neurons), paired stimuli induced a
facilitation that peaked at a 20-40 msec interpulse interval (Fig.
4A). By contrast, at several synapses (13 of 43) a
paired-pulse facilitation with a negative value was detected. For 7 of
the 43 cells studied, no net facilitation could be detected (facilitation ranging from 3 to +3% at a 40 msec interpulse
interval). To investigate the effect of apRab3-Q80L on paired-pulse
facilitation, these experiments were performed in control conditions
and after injection of apRab3-Q80L. In the eight experiments performed, paired-pulse facilitation was significantly higher in the presence of
the mutated protein (Fig. 4A,B). When a negative
facilitation was seen during the control period (Fig.
4B, cells 6-8), it was reduced after
injection of apRab3-Q80L. Importantly, the augmentation of facilitation
was higher at the peak of facilitation and marginal for the longest
interpulse time interval (Fig. 4A). Therefore, the
apRab3-Q80L-induced increase in facilitation parallels the changes in
[Ca2+]i. The increase in paired-pulse
facilitation induced by apRab3-Q80L was consistent with the
potentiation of release detected during a train of action potentials
(Fig. 3) and again suggests that the negative effect of apRab3-Q80L on
evoked release is depressed during a transient increase in
[Ca2+]i.

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Figure 4.
Intracellular injection of apRab3-Q80L potentiates
paired-pulse facilitation. Paired stimuli were given at various
interpulse time intervals in the control medium, before and after
intraneuronal injection of recombinant apRab3-Q80L. A,
In this representative experiment, the extent of paired-pulse
facilitation was calculated in control conditions and after
stabilization of apRab3-Q80L-induced inhibition of evoked ACh release
(here of 46%). The mean facilitation (± SD, from 25-30 recordings at
each time interval) is significantly potentiated by apRab3-Q80L
(p < 0.001) except at an interval of 90 msec (p ~ 0.01) and 180 msec
(p > 0.05). B, Summary of
eight distinct experiments. For comparison, the mean facilitation
observed at a 40 msec interpulse interval is reported for eight neurons
(±SD, calculated from at least 25 recordings). Note that whatever the
initial facilitation, positive or negative, apRab3-Q80L application was
followed by an increased facilitation. For all cells,
p < 0.001.
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Because the "residual Ca2+ hypothesis" (Katz and
Miledi, 1968 ; Kamiya and Zucker, 1994 ) has been debated (Blundon et
al., 1993 ), we examined experimental situations in which the
Ca2+ dependency of both paired-pulse facilitation
and apRab3-Q80L action on facilitation could be addressed
simultaneously. [Ca2+]e was lowered by
modifying the extracellular
[Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio. As
observed at other synapses (for review, see Zucker, 1989 , 1996 ; Van der
Kloot and Molgó, 1994 ), evoked ACh release was found to diminish
(data not shown) and paired-pulse facilitation to increase when
[Ca2+]e was lowered (Fig.
5A, black bars).
Although the magnitude of the inhibition induced by apRab3-Q80L was not
affected significantly by lowering
[Ca2+]e (data not shown), its ability
to increase facilitation was found to be diminished (Fig.
5A). At the lowest
[Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio tested
(0.14), no significant effect was detected (Fig. 5A)
(p > 0.05). The significance of this
observation could be ascertained because we were able to study
paired-pulse facilitation subsequently in low Ca2+
medium ([Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio
of 0.14) and control medium
([Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio of
0.42), both before and after apRab3-Q80L injection, for three neurons.
As shown in Figure 5B, the increment in facilitation measured in low Ca2+ medium was marginal as compared
with that observed for the same neurons in control medium. There are
two possible interpretations of this observation. Either the high
magnitude of paired-pulse facilitation at low
[Ca2+]e masks the potentiating effect
of apRab3-Q80L observed in control medium or facilitation had already
reached a maximal value that could not be increased further by
injecting apRab3-Q80L.

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Figure 5.
Ca2+ dependency of the effect
of apRab3-Q80L on paired-pulse facilitation. A, In
separate experiments, neurotransmitter release was evoked in the
presence of a physiological medium with
[Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratios of 0.14, 0.21, or 0.42 to change extracellular [Ca2+]. When
referred to the release measured at a 0.42 [Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio, ACh
release was depressed to 72% (±7; n = 4) at 0.21 [Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio and to
35% (±8; n = 4) at 0.14 [Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio.
Paired-pulse facilitation was determined (as described in Fig. 4) at
these different ionic conditions (black bars). Then
apRab3-Q80L was injected into the neurons, and after stabilization of
the inhibition induced by apRab3-Q80L, paired-pulse facilitation was
determined (gray bars). Note that the
paired-pulse facilitation values are reported for an interpulse
interval of 40 msec. Asterisk denotes that
p < 0.001. At
[Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio = 0.14, p > 0.05. B, Similar
experiment as in A, except paired-pulse facilitation was
determined for each neuron at the unique 40 msec interval in control
medium ([Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio
of 0.42) and then in low Ca2+ medium
([Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio of
0.14). Similar measurements were made after stabilization of the
inhibition induced by apRab3-Q80L. At each
[Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio, results
are expressed as the mean difference between the facilitation observed
before and after injection of the mutated Rab3 protein;
p < 0.001.
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According to the residual [Ca2+] hypothesis,
paired-pulse facilitation depends on the spatial and time overlap of
Ca2+ microdomains that build up near calcium
channels. Therefore, we used Cd2+ ions that block
indiscriminately all kinds of voltage-dependent Ca2+
channels (for review, see Van der Kloot and Molgó, 1994 ) to reduce the number of sites of Ca2+ influx.
Superfusion of the buccal ganglion with a physiological medium
([Ca2+]/[Mg2+] ratio of 0.42)
containing 200 µM CdCl2 reduced ACh release
to nearly half (54 ± 12%; n = 6) (see also
Figure 6A,
closed and open symbols). This blockade appeared
to be caused mainly by an inhibition of Ca2+ entry
because ACh release could be fully restored after washing (Fig.
6A, open symbols). In addition,
intracellular injection of CdCl2 (>100 µM,
final intrasomatic concentration) did not modify evoked
neurotransmission (not shown). After stabilization of the CdCl2-induced blockade, paired-pulse facilitation appeared
to be nearly abolished ( 4.8% ± 9.8; n = 6; 40 msec
interpulse interval). This result is in complete agreement with similar
observations at the vertebrate neuromuscular junction (for review, see
Van der Kloot and Molgó, 1994 ). When apRab3-Q80L was injected
after stabilization of the Cd2+-induced inhibition
of ACh release, release was inhibited by an extent that was similar in
magnitude to that observed in the absence of Cd2+
(46 ± 9%; n = 3 to compare with 36%;
n = 17; p > 0.05); see for example
condition 3 in Figure 6A. However, more importantly,
paired-pulse facilitation was unaffected when apRab3-Q80L was injected
in the presence of CdCl2. A typical experiment of three is
shown in Figure 6B; compare bars in conditions 2 and
3. After Cd2+ ions were washed out, evoked ACh
release could be recovered from the Cd2+ block, and
a clear increase in paired-pulse facilitation could be induced by
apRab3-Q80L (Fig. 6B; bar in condition
4; see top recording in C). These
experiments showed that minimizing the changes in residual
[Ca2+]i prevents apRab3-Q80L from
increasing paired-pulse facilitation. Therefore, the action of
GTP-bound Rab3 on facilitation is functionally linked to the
Ca2+ dependency of facilitation.

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Figure 6.
Effect of CdCl2 on paired-pulse
facilitation before and after injection of apRab3-Q80L.
A, In this typical experiment, neurotransmitter release
from two neurons was followed in the presence of control medium
(condition 1), in presence of 200 µM
CdCl2 (denoted by the horizontal bar in
conditions 2 and 3), and after washing
out CdCl2 (condition 4). In addition,
one neuron ( ) was injected with apRab3-Q80L (arrow,
Q80L; conditions 3 and
4). B, For the neuron identified
by (i.e., the one injected by apRab3-Q80L), paired-pulse
facilitation (mean ± SD) was determined at a 40 msec interpulse
interval in the four experimental conditions described in
A. Asterisk denotes p < 0.001 when the amplitude of facilitation is compared with any other
condition. C, Typical recordings of paired postsynaptic
responses recorded in the four experimental conditions described in
A. For comparison, postsynaptic responses were
normalized against the amplitude of the first response in the pair.
Note that decay times of postsynaptic responses were shorter in
CdCl2; this was taken into account for determining
paired-pulse facilitation (see Materials and Methods).
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|
Post-tetanic potentiation is not modified after injection
of apRab3-Q80L
Because a rise in [Ca2+]i
underlies different forms of synaptic plasticity (Zucker, 1989 , 1996 ),
we investigated the possibility that injection of apRab3-Q80L might
also alter post-tetanic potentiation (PTP). This latter is initiated by
an increase in residual [Ca2+]i that
accumulates during tetanic stimulation (Kretz et al., 1982 ; Swandulla
et al., 1991 ; Kamiya and Zucker, 1994 ; Bao et al., 1997 ). At the
cholinergic synapse of the buccal ganglion, PTP was easily and
reproducibly initiated by three trains of action potentials at 50 Hz
for 1.5 sec each (Fig. 7). During PTP,
the evoked ACh release was enhanced by 33.5 ± 5.2% in control
conditions. PTP lasted >30 min (mean of eight PTPs measured in control
period; three neurons). It is likely that PTP duration largely exceeds the time required by the nerve terminals to buffer
[Ca2+]i to its resting level.
Interestingly, although apRab3-Q80L clearly increased facilitation
during the conditioning trains (Fig. 4C), neither the
amplitude nor time course of PTP was affected (Fig. 7). After
apRab3-Q80L injection, the mean increase of ACh release during PTP was
39 ± 7.2% (mean of six PTPs recorded in three neurons at least 2 hr after injection of the GTPase-deficient apRab3). Similarly, the PTP
at hippocampal slices from Rab3A-deficient mice are unaltered (Geppert
et al., 1994 ; Castillo et al., 1997 ). The absence of PTP modification
pinpoints the possibility that the modulation of GTP-Rab3 action by
Ca2+ does not persist long after
[Ca2+]i has returned to a normal
level.

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Figure 7.
Post-tetanic potentiation is not affected by
apRab3-Q80L. This experiment was similar to that described in Figure 1,
and in addition, during control period or after injection of
apRab3-Q80L, post-tetanic potentiation (PTP) was elicited
(arrows) (see Materials and Methods). For
simplification, only one PTP is reported during the control period. The
magnitude of PTP was not significantly different before and after
injection of apRab3-Q80L.
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|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The GDP/GTP cycling of Rab3A is rate-limiting for
calcium-dependent exocytosis
A recombinant GTPase-deficient Rab3 protein was introduced
intracellularly to gain insight into the functional role of GTP-bound Rab3 in neuroexocytosis. According to our previous work (Johannes et
al., 1996 ), apRab3-Q80L inhibits Ca2+-dependent
evoked release; wild-type apRab3 is much less potent. These findings
are in agreement with (1) the inhibition of the secretion induced by
overexpression or injection of wild-type or GTPase-deficient Rab3A in
chromaffin cells and PC12 cells (Holz et al., 1994 ; Johannes et al.,
1994 ; Weber et al., 1996 ) or insulin-secreting cells (Regazzi et al.,
1996 ) and (2) the increased secretory activity that follows suppression
of Rab3A via an antisense strategy (Johannes et al., 1994 ) or by the
knock-out of Rab3A gene in mice (Geppert et al., 1997 ). Taken together,
these results suggest that Aplysia-Rab3 is a functional
homolog of mammalian Rab3A.
The intracellular actions of apRab3-Q80L and wild-type apRab3 differ in
potency. The weak effect of exogenous apRab3 on neurotransmission suggests that the levels of endogenous apRab3 were not limiting for
exocytosis in most of the neurons studied. The stronger action of
apRab3-Q80L as compared with wild-type apRab3 may be easily explained
by the fact that apRab3-Q80L remains longer than the wild-type protein
under the GTP-bound form because of its reduced GTPase activity.
Therefore, the inhibitory effect of apRab3-Q80L on ACh release
demonstrates that the GTP/GDP cycling of Rab3 is functionally linked to
the exocytotic process. Whether this inhibitory effect of apRab3-Q80L
highlights a negative modulatory action of endogenous GTP-bound Rab3 or
indicates that GTP hydrolysis by Rab3, per se, constitutes the positive
signal required for exocytosis to proceed further is still an open
question. GTP hydrolysis by Rab5 is not necessary for homotypic fusion
of early endosomes (Rybin et al., 1996 ). Moreover, in rat intermediate
pituitary cells, a GTPase-deficient Rab3A protein increases the
secretory activity (M. Rupnik, L. Johannes, F. Nothias, L. Kocmur-Bobanovic, R. Zorec, P. Vernier, and F. Darchen, unpublished
observations). Thus, in these cells GTP hydrolysis by Rab3A is not
essential for exocytosis. The GTPase activity of Rab3 seems likely to
act as a timer for synaptic vesicle exocytosis as proposed for Rab5 in
the endocytic process (Rybin et al., 1996 ). Hence, apRab3-Q80L would
inhibit exocytosis by slowing the synaptic vesicle cycle, probably
because it delays the release of downstream effectors such as Rabphilin
and Rim that interact specifically with GTP-bound Rab3.
The steps regulated by GTP-bound Rab3 are still unclear. Consistent
with the identification of several effectors/acceptors for Rab3, Rab3
seems to intervene at different stages in the exocytosis of synaptic
vesicles (for review, see Bean and Scheller, 1997 ). Examination of
Caenorhabditis elegans Rab3 mutant synapses suggests that
Rab3 may regulate the recruitment of vesicles to the active zone or
sequestration of vesicles near the release site (Nonet et al., 1997 ).
By analogy with Rab5 action (Rybin et al., 1996 ), Rab3 may stabilize
the docking-fusion complex. We have proposed that Rab3 acts after the
SNARE complex formation (i.e., after the docking of synaptic vesicles)
(Johannes et al., 1996 ). Hence, Rab3 would contribute to synaptic
vesicle priming. Moreover, Rab3A may have a very late action on
exocytosis, after the Ca2+-dependent step that
determines release probability (Geppert et al., 1997 ).
Negative regulation of exocytosis by GTP-bound Rab3 is
Ca2+ dependent
The regulation of neurotransmitter release by the GTP-bound form
of Rab3 depends in some way on
[Ca2+]i. Indeed, the inhibitory action
of apRab3-Q80L on neuroexocytosis was found to be strongly potentiated
when [Ca2+]i was lowered (Fig. 2).
Moreover, an increase in two Ca2+-dependent forms of
short-term plasticity, paired-pulse and train facilitation, was
observed in the presence of apRab3-Q80L (Figs. 3, 4). A likely
interpretation is that the inhibitory action of apRab3-Q80L, and most
likely of GTP-Rab3, on exocytosis is depressed when
[Ca2+]i is enhanced. Note, however,
that if apRab3-Q80L inhibits the release process by decreasing only the
release probability p, in paired stimulations, the
conditioning stimulus would recruit a smaller fraction of releasable
vesicles and thus the test stimulus would act on a larger number of
vesicles, leading to an increased paired-pulse facilitation. This
possibility seems unlikely because (1) it could not easily account for
the increased facilitation observed during long trains of stimulations
in which the absolute magnitude of the responses is very similar in
control and apRab3-Q80L injected neurons; (2) at hippocampal synapses
of Rab3A-deficient mice, p was not modified (Geppert et al.,
1997 ); and (3) the action of Rab3 before vesicle docking deduced from
studies on C.elegans (Nonet et al., 1997 ) suggests that a
part of Rab3 function is to regulate n, the number of
releasable vesicles. Moreover, when transient changes in
[Ca2+]i were minimized by
extracellular application of 200 µM
Cd2+, the increase in paired-pulse facilitation
induced by apRab3-Q80L was abolished (Fig. 6B),
whereas apRab3-Q80L was still able to inhibit ACh release (Fig.
6A).
The on-off kinetics of GTP-Rab3 modulation by Ca2+
appears to be very fast: a clear effect of apRab3-Q80L on facilitation
could be detected for a stimulus interval of 20 msec. This effect
persisted during the whole duration of trains of stimuli at 50 Hz (Fig. 3C), but PTP was unaffected. Hence, the timing of the
modulation of GTP-Rab3 activity seems to parallel that of the
Ca2+ transient. In agreement with our observations
of a Ca2+ dependency of Rab3 action, intracellular
application of antisense oligonucleotides directed against Rab3A mRNA
into bovine chromaffin cells leads to increased secretory activity that
is magnified at low [Ca2+]i (Johannes
et al., 1994 ). To summarize, GTP-Rab3 acts as a
Ca2+-dependent brake for the vesicle exocytosis
process, and a physiological way to remove this effect might be to
increase [Ca2+]i.
Until now, there has been no indication suggesting that the intrinsic
activity of Rab3 might be Ca2+ dependent. The
Ca2+ dependency of GTP-Rab3 action might be
accounted for by two mechanisms. First, Ca2+ might
affect the functional cycle of Rab3, for instance, by modulating the
activity of the specific Rab3-GTPase-activating protein (Fukui et al.,
1997 ) or by acting on calmodulin, because it was reported recently that
Ca2+/calmodulin causes Rab3A to dissociate from
synaptic membranes (Park et al., 1997 ). Second, GTP-bound Rab3 action
on the secretory process may be modulated as a function of
[Ca2+]i through the action of
Ca2+-binding effectors that act downstream of
GTP-Rab3. Two possible effectors, Rabphilin and Rim, interact with Rab3
as a function of its binding to GTP, and both of them have
Ca2+/phospholipid binding domains (C2 domains) that
might be responsible for the observed Ca2+-dependent
modulation of the GTP-Rab3 effect (Shirataki et al., 1992 ; McKiernan et
al., 1993 ; Wang et al., 1997 ). In addition, the binding of Rabphilin to
phospholipids occurs in the presence of micromolar concentrations of
Ca2+ (Yamaguchi et al., 1993 ). These values are in
agreement with the apparent Ca2+ affinities of the
priming step of exocytosis (Bittner and Holz, 1992 ) and that of the
Ca2+ sensors involved in several synaptic plasticity
phenomena. Indeed, it has been reported previously that facilitation
implicates Ca2+ targets that have higher
Ca2+ affinities than the Ca2+
sensor implicated in triggering vesicle fusion (i.e., in the 1 µM rather than the 100 µM range) (for
review, see Zucker, 1996 ).
Rab3 in synaptic plasticity
Intracellular injection of the constitutively active apRab3-Q80L,
which mimics an increase in endogenous GTP-bound Rab3, led to increased
paired-pulse and train facilitation (Figs. 3-5). Moreover, paired-pulse facilitation increases at hippocampal CA1 excitatory synapses in mutant mice lacking Rab3A (Geppert et al., 1997 ). Hence,
these two distinct approaches pinpoint an involvement of Rab3 in
short-term synaptic facilitation. However, the role of Rab3 in
facilitation may involve distinct actions: indeed, at Aplysia synapses, the increase in facilitation observed
after apRab3-Q80L injection appears to result from a
Ca2+-induced transient reduction in the GTP-Rab3
inhibitory action on neuroexocytosis, but obviously this explanation
cannot apply when Rab3A is lacking. Moreover, Rab3A has been implicated
in long-term potentiation at hippocampal mossy fibers (Castillo et al.,
1997 ) but not at excitatory CA1 synapses (Geppert et al., 1994 ). Taken
together, these observations indicate that the participation of Rab3 in
the regulation of presynaptic efficacy and synaptic plasticity depends
on the physiological conditions or the pattern of expression of its
partners or both. As noted above, this is consistent with the
identification of several effectors for Rab3 and the implication of
Rab3 at several distinct steps of the exocytotic process (see above
discussion).
Until recently, the identity of the targets that are affected by
changes in residual Ca2+ has remained unclear.
Several possibilities exist that are not mutually exclusive. For
instance, the Ca2+-binding protein Frequenin has
been proposed to participate in facilitation (Rivosecchi et al., 1994 ).
More recently, changes in [Ca2+]i have
been observed to strongly modulate the binding of the N-type
Ca2+ channel to syntaxin and SNAP-25 (Sheng et al.,
1996 ). Moreover, intracellular injection of a peptide corresponding to
the syntaxin binding domain of Ca2+ channels
inhibits evoked neurotransmitter release but increases both
paired-pulse facilitation and spontaneous release (Mochida et al.,
1996 ). Hence, part of presynaptic facilitation may originate from
modulation of the docking-fusion particle dynamics or the probability
of opening of Ca2+ channels. In this paper, we
present a set of functional data suggesting that a
Ca2+-dependent modulation of GTP-bound Rab3 action
or its partners may account for at least part of the short-term
plasticity phenomena such as paired-pulse facilitation or train
facilitation. This deduction is fully consistent with several recent
papers that ascribe a role for Rab3 late in exocytosis (Johannes et
al., 1996 ; Bean and Scheller, 1997 ; Geppert et al., 1997 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 15, 1997; revised Feb. 13, 1998; accepted Feb. 17, 1998.
This work was supported by research contracts from the Association
Française de Lutte contre les Myopathies (B.P., J.-P.H., F.D),
the Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale (B.P.), and the Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (J.-P. H.). We thank Dr. Y. Hu, Dr. R. Baston, and Dr. E. R. Kandel for the cDNA
encoding Aplysia-Rab3, M. P. Laran-Chich for
technical assistance, Dr. L. Johannes for his help in the starting of
this study, Dr. A. Feltz, Dr. J. L. Bossu, and Dr. T. Galli for
critical reading of this manuscript, and Dr. N. Grant for revising this
manuscript.
This paper is dedicated to Dr. Alberto Mallart on the occasion of the
anniversary of his pioneering studies on synaptic facilitation and his
retirement from Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
Correspondence should be addressed to Bernard Poulain, Laboratoire de
Neurobiologie Cellulaire, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique,
5 rue B. Pascal, F-67084 Strasbourg Cedex,
France.
 |
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