Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 1999, 19(15):6427-6438
Correlation of Miniature Synaptic Activity and Evoked Release
Probability in Cultures of Cortical Neurons
Oliver
Prange1 and
Timothy H.
Murphy1, 2
Kinsmen Laboratory of Neurological Research, Departments of
1 Psychiatry and 2 Physiology, University of
British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z3, Canada
 |
ABSTRACT |
Spontaneous miniature synaptic activity is caused by action
potential (AP)-independent release of transmitter vesicles and is
regulated at the level of single synapses. In cultured cortical neurons
we have used this spontaneous vesicle turnover to load the styryl dye
FM1-43 into synapses with high rates of miniature synaptic activity.
Automated selection procedures restricted analysis to synapses with
sufficient levels of miniature activity-mediated FM1-43 uptake. After
FM1-43 loading, vesicular FM1-43 release in response to AP
stimulation was recorded at single synapses as a measure of release
probability. We find that synapses with high rates of miniature
activity possess significantly enhanced evoked release rates compared
with a control population. Because the difference in release rates
between the two populations is [Ca2+]o-dependent, it is most likely
caused by a difference in release probability. Within the subpopulation
of synapses with high miniature activity, we find that the
probabilities for miniature and AP-evoked release are correlated at
single synaptic sites. Furthermore, the degree of miniature synaptic
activity is correlated with the vesicle pool size. These findings
suggest that both evoked and miniature vesicular release are regulated
in parallel and that the frequency of miniature synaptic activity can
be used as an indicator for evoked release efficacy.
Key words:
miniature; evoked; synapse; vesicle; release; probability; pool size; calcium
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Spontaneous miniature synaptic
activity exists throughout the vertebrate nervous system. Miniature
activity is attributed to spontaneous AP-independent presynaptic
release of one (Frerking et al., 1997
) or more (Vautrin and Barker,
1995
; Wall and Usowicz, 1998
) transmitter quanta. Findings from our
laboratory using postsynaptic imaging of miniature activity indicate
that the probability for miniature release is highly variant between
synapses even on the same dendrite (Murphy et al., 1994
, 1995
; Wang et
al., 1999
). This variability among synapses indicates that miniature
release can be regulated on the level of individual synapses. It has
been shown that [Ca2+]i influences the
frequency of miniature activity in CNS (Minota et al., 1991
;
Doze et al., 1995
; Scanziani et al., 1995
; Capogna et al., 1996a
, 1997
;
Poisbeau et al., 1996
; Schoppa and Westbrook, 1997
; Bao et al., 1998
;
Li et al., 1998
) and peripheral nervous system (PNS) (Matthews and
Wickelgren, 1977
; Marcus et al., 1992
; Katz et al., 1995
). Furthermore,
downstream of Ca2+ influx second messenger systems
such as protein kinase C (PKC) (Ghiradi et al., 1992
; Parfitt and
Madison, 1993
; Capogna et al., 1995
; Carroll et al., 1998
; Stevens and
Sullivan, 1998
) and cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)
(Chavez-Noriega and Stevens, 1994
; Kondo and Marty, 1997
; Chen and
Regehr, 1997
) have been implicated in the regulation of miniature
activity. Both PKA (Ghiradi et al., 1992
; Hell et al., 1995
; Tong et
al., 1996
) and PKC (for review, see Ramakers et al., 1997
; Majewski and
Iannazzo, 1998
) have also been shown to regulate action potential
(AP)-dependent transmitter release.
Unlike (AP-) evoked transmitter release (Haage et al., 1998
), continued
miniature release is apparently mediated by low-threshold rather than
high-threshold voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs) (Parfitt and
Madison, 1993
; Momiyama and Takahashi, 1994
; Scanziani et al., 1995
;
Bao et al., 1998
). Although different channels may control AP-evoked
and spontaneous release, there is good evidence that miniature and
evoked release can be regulated in parallel at presynaptic terminals of
the mammalian nervous system. First, synaptic vesicles available for
AP-evoked and AP-independent release are drawn from the same readily
releasable pool (Rosenmund and Stevens, 1996
). Second, both forms of
release are controlled by core parts of a common release machinery
(Capogna et al., 1997
; Mochida et al., 1997
; Hua et al., 1998
). And
third, changes in evoked release after the induction of short-term
(Kamiya and Zucker, 1994
; Cummings et al., 1996
; for review, see
Zucker, 1996
; Fisher et al., 1997
) and of long-term (Minota et al.,
1991
; Malgaroli and Tsien, 1992
; Arancio et al., 1995
; Tong et al.,
1996
; but see Cormier and Kelly, 1996
) synaptic plasticity are
paralleled by changes in miniature frequency.
These findings led us to address whether synapses that display high
rates of miniature synaptic activity would also possess elevated evoked
release properties. Using the styryl dye FM1-43 (Betz and Bewick,
1992
, 1993
), which allows monitoring of vesicular turnover at single
synaptic boutons (Ryan et al., 1993
, 1997
; Murthy et al., 1997
), we
have developed a protocol to selectively load the dye into boutons with
high miniature synaptic activity, as previously reported in abstract
form (Prange and Murphy, 1997
, 1998
). We find that at synapses with
high levels of miniature activity AP-evoked release is elevated.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cortical neurons and glia were dissociated from 18-d-old Wistar
rat fetuses and cultured for 16-25 d on
poly-D-lysine-coated 12 mm glass coverslips before
experiments (as described by Mackenzie et al., 1996
). For the
experiments, coverslips were cut into two pieces, placed into a
customized perfusion chamber (~500 µl vol), and fixed by platinum
weights to prevent movement. Continuous perfusion was supplied by an
HBSS medium containing (in mM) 137 NaCl, 2.5 CaCl2, 1.0 MgSO4, 5.0 KCl, 0.34 Na2HPO4 (7 H2O), 10.0 Na+-HEPES buffer, 1.0 NaHCO3,
and 22.0 glucose at pH 7.4 and ~315 mOsm. CaCl2 and
MgSO4 concentrations were altered as indicated in Results and in the figure legends. Additionally, the glutamate receptor antagonists D-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid
(D,L-APV; 60 µM) and
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX; 3 µM)
were added to prevent spontaneous APs and recurrent excitation
during field stimulation. Constant current stimulation (30 mA; 1 msec pulse duration) was delivered via two platinum electrodes fixed on
opposite sides of the perfusion chamber (distance ~8 mm).
In control experiments, presynaptic terminals were loaded by applying a
1200 pulse field stimulus train at 10 Hz in the presence of 10 µM FM1-43 (Fig. 1).
FM1-43 exposure continued for 60 sec after the stimulus train to allow
for complete vesicle endocytosis (Ryan and Smith, 1995
). In experiments
in which FM1-43 uptake was achieved by miniature activity, the
specimens were continuously exposed to 10 µM FM1-43 for
10-20 min (Fig. 1). To promote miniature synaptic activity during the
exposure, the medium was supplemented with 5 mM
[Ca2+], 0.6 µM tetrodotoxin (TTX),
and lacked Mg2+. To ensure that each treatment group
received the same amount of AP and high
[Ca2+]o stimulation, before FM1-43
loading, the miniature-loading trials were exposed to 1200 field
stimuli in 2.5 mM [Ca2+]o
and 1 mM [Mg2+]o.
Accordingly, before AP-dependent loading, control trials were exposed
to 5 mM [Ca2+]o and 0.6 µM TTX for 10-20 min (followed by a 5 min washout of TTX
in 2.5 mM [Ca2+]o and 1 mM [Mg2+]o). With
these preloading treatments, both groups were exposed to the same
solutions and stimuli before FM1-43 loading and unloading was
performed (Fig. 1). This was designed to minimize differences in the
protocols between miniature-loading and AP-loading (control) experiments.

View larger version (31K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
FM1-43 uptake into synaptic terminals
using miniature synaptic activity and AP-inducing field stimulation.
FM1-43 was loaded into a subpopulation of synapses with high miniature
activity (white symbols) by using miniature
activity-promoting conditions (5 mM
[Ca2+]o/0.6 µM
TTX) during 10-20 min FM1-43 exposure. A control group of synapses
(black symbols) was loaded with FM1-43 using
AP-inducing field stimulation (10 Hz) during 2 min dye exposure. Both
groups received respective pretreatments before dye loading to minimize
differences between the individual loading protocols. After loading,
for both groups (gray symbols) identical
protocols for excess dye washout (15-20 min), field stimulation (2 and
10 Hz) and imaging (every 5 sec) were used. Synaptic FM1-43
fluorescence was recorded during an unstimulated baseline period, a
period of AP-inducing field stimulation, and after complete unloading
of vesicle pools using 10 Hz field stimulation for 2 min. To account
for the different loading protocols of both groups, evoked FM1-43
fluorescence changes were normalized to the total amount of releasable
fluorescence at each synapse (see Appendix, Eq. 2). Changes in FM1-43
baseline fluorescence (I-II) and
the total amount of releasable fluorescence
(III-V) were used to determine the
signal-to-noise properties of each bouton. For both groups, the rate of
FM1-43 fluorescence decrease (III-IV) during 2 Hz
field stimulation was used as a measure of evoked release
probability (Prel) at individual
synapses. During periods of stimulation glutamate receptor antagonists
CNQX (3 µM) and APV (60 µM) were present to
block recurrent excitation.
|
|
For (reloading) experiments in which multiple loading and unloading
trials were performed over the same area of interest (see Fig.
7A), FM1-43 bouton loading by field stimulation was
achieved using four trains of 300 stimuli (10 Hz) spaced by 5 sec
intervals. This protocol was expected to result in complete loading of
vesicle pools. Therefore, the total amount of FM1-43 bouton
fluorescence would be a measure of bouton size (Henkel et al., 1996
),
and the amount of evoked FM1-43 release a measure of release
probability (see Appendix, Eq. 3). FM1-43 bouton loading by miniature
activity was achieved by 10 min of continued dye exposure with 0.6 µM TTX and 5 mM
[Ca2+]o present. Based on the
estimated average vesicle pool sizes for cultured CNS terminals (~200
vesicles) (Liu and Tsien, 1995
; Murthy et al., 1997
; Ryan et al.,
1997
), this protocol was expected to result in submaximal loading of
vesicle pools. Hence, the amount of FM1-43 fluorescence at a synaptic
bouton would be a measure of its miniature activity (probability)
during the loading time (see Appendix, Eq. 4). For all experiments,
preparations were washed for 15-25 min after dye loading in the above
medium supplemented with 5 mM Mg2+ but
no added Ca2+ to minimize synaptic FM1-43 release
attributed to spontaneous action potentials and miniature synaptic
activity. FM1-43 bouton unloading was achieved using field stimulation
protocols consisting of a 2 Hz stimulus train during which FM1-43
unloading was recorded, followed by a 10 Hz stimulus train to determine
the total amount of releasable FM1-43 fluorescence (Fig. 1). All
experiments were conducted at room temperature (~23°C).
Confocal imaging was performed on a Bio-Rad (Herts, UK) MRC 600 system
attached to a Zeiss (Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) upright
microscope (Axioskop) using an Olympus 0.9 NA 60× water immersion
objective (Olympus Optical, Tokyo, Japan). Laser intensity was
attenuated to 1% for imaging experiments. The confocal pinhole was set
to 4.5 (Bio-Rad units) for reloading experiments and to 3.0 for all
other experiments. To improve signal-to-noise properties, the confocal
slow scan mode (without averaging) was used. For data acquisition, a
field of 128 × 128 µm (400 × 400 pixels) was scanned
every 5 sec during baseline and periods of field stimulation (Fig. 1).
Image collection during the baseline period was used to calculate the
signal-to-noise ratio at each synapse and was followed by 15 sec of 2 Hz field stimulation to determine the fractional FM1-43 unloading
(Fig. 1, see Fig. 5; see Appendix, Eqs. 1, 2). For experiments in which absolute (rather then fractional) FM1-43 fluorescence changes were evaluated (see Figs. 4, 7-9),
corrections were made for uneven illumination (lower signal at edges of
field) by dividing all fluorescence by a control image of a
carboxyfluorescein solution. Additionally, in these experiments a
(vertical) Z-series of 13 consecutive confocal images (spaced at 0.54 µm) over the area of interest was acquired after each loading trial
utilizing a computer controlled focus motor. The fluorescence intensity of each bouton in the focal plane was corrected based on its
relative position within the confocal Z-series (Prange and Murphy,
1999
). Furthermore, boutons contaminated by signals from stained
structures above or below their focal plane were eliminated from
further analysis (Prange and Murphy, 1999
).

View larger version (93K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Automated procedure to select
responsive from nonresponsive putative synaptic sites.
A, B, Confocal image showing punctate
FM1-43 staining pattern in cultured cortical neurons after
(A) delivery of 1200 field stimuli with dye
present (controls) or (B) incubation in miniature
synaptic activity-promoting medium for 15 min with dye present. For
both FM1-43-loading protocols excessive background dye was washed out
for 15-20 min. Under conditions that promote miniature synaptic
activity only a subpopulation (~20%) of all boutons load a
significant amount (see Materials and Methods) of FM1-43 into a pool
releasable by APs. Boxes 1-3 refer to
putative synaptic boutons that were subjected to an automated criterion
selecting responsive from nonresponsive putative boutons (C,
D). C, D, Plot of FM1-43
fluorescence versus time at putative synaptic boutons highlighted in
A and B, respectively. Confocal images
were taken every 5 sec during 45 sec of baseline and 15 sec of 2 Hz
field stimulation. Residual FM1-43 fluorescence remaining after a
1200-pulse stimulus train (10 Hz) was subtracted at each site to
determine the total amount of releasable dye. To be selected for
further analysis, putative synapses have to pass the following
automated criteria (see Materials and Methods): (1) total amount of
releasable dye has to be >0; (2) variation (SD) of baseline
fluorescence has to be <10% of total amount of releasable
fluorescence. Putative synaptic boutons 1 and 2 pass, and 3 fails the
criterion. Lightning bolt depicts onset of AP-inducing
field stimulation.
|
|
Confocal images were exported as byte data and analyzed using
customized routines written in IDL (Research Systems, Inc., Boulder,
CO). For each experiment, 100-400 putative synaptic boutons were
analyzed, and fluorescence changes over time were averaged over ~2.6
µm2 at each site. Putative boutons were randomly
selected based on averaged images acquired during the unstimulated
baseline period. For experiments that determined the number of
responsive boutons within the visual field (Fig.
3C,D), the selection of
responsive boutons was maximized by using a difference image that
depicted the loci of FM1-43 release during field stimulation.

View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Elevated miniature synaptic activity
in the presence of high [Ca2+]o.
A, Whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings were performed to
measure the effect of [Ca2+]o on
the rate of miniature synaptic activity. Examples of voltage-clamp
records from one cell. The cell was perfused with the indicated
extracellular divalent ion concentrations (in mM): 0.6 µM TTX was added to block spontaneous APs.
B, Plot of the ratio of miniature activity (events per
second) in high versus low [Ca2+]o
from (n = 5) cells. Miniature activity is
significantly elevated in all cells during multiple trials of
[Ca2+]o wash-in
(***p < 0.0001). Error bar indicates SEM ratio
across cells. C, Percentage of synapses loaded FM1-43
by miniature synaptic activity as a function of
[Ca2+]o. Synapses of sister cultures
were perfused with either a high or low
[Ca2+]o containing medium during 13 min of dye exposure (n = 14 experiments). An
automated criterion was applied to select boutons that showed
significant FM1-43 uptake during the different treatments periods. The
average percentage of boutons that load FM1-43 into their releasable
vesicle pools by miniature activity significantly increases (by
4.9×; **p < 0.05) when elevating
[Ca2+]o from 0 to 5 mM.
D, The average amount of miniature activity-mediated
FM1-43 uptake does not differ between the groups. Ion concentrations
are millimolar. Error bars indicate SEM.
|
|
Nonreleasable fluorescence (i.e., fluorescence remaining after the 1200 pulse field stimulus train) was subtracted at each bouton before
further analyses were performed. FM1-43 changes were averaged over 15 sec of a 2 Hz stimulus train (three images) and during an identical
time interval of nonstimulated baseline (Fig. 1). For (reloading)
experiments using multiple loading and unloading trials (see Figs.
7-9) and experiments comparing absolute amounts of FM1-43 uptake
(Figs. 3D, 4), raw FM1-43
fluorescence (
F) changes were analyzed (see
Appendix, Eq. 3). For all other experiments, FM1-43 fluorescence
changes were normalized to the total amount of releasable FM1-43
fluorescence (
F/F) (see Appendix, Eq. 1). An automated response criterion was used to select responsive from
nonresponsive putative boutons (Fig. 2). To be considered for further
analysis, boutons had to meet the following criteria: (1) there must be
a net decrease in FM1-43 fluorescence in response to a 2 and a 10 Hz
train of field stimuli; and (2) the SD of the baseline had to be
<10% of the total releasable fluorescence of the bouton. The criteria
were modified for reloading experiments as follows: (1) the total
releasable fluorescence of the boutons after loading by miniature
activity had to be >5 × SD of the baseline fluorescence; and (2)
the decrease in FM1-43 fluorescence during 40 stimuli at 2 Hz had to
>2.0 × SD of the baseline fluorescence. Additionally, in these
experiments analysis was restricted to boutons at which the amount of
FM1-43 uptake during 1200 AP stimulation exceeded the amount of
FM1-43 uptake during 10 min incubation time in a miniature
activity-promoting medium (80% of all sites selected). This was done
to ensure that FM1-43 loading using 1200 APs resulted in a
fluorescence measurement representative of the entire vesicle pool.

View larger version (52K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Submaximal FM1-43 loading of vesicle pools during
10 min of miniature synaptic activity. The amount of synaptic FM1-43
loading was compared between two groups of synapses subjected to
different loading conditions. In the first group (gray
bars; n = 335 boutons), FM1-43 uptake was
achieved by 10 min of dye exposure in a miniature activity-promoting
medium (5 mM Ca2+/0.6 µM
TTX). In the second (control) group (white bars;
n = 822 boutons) FM1-43 uptake was stimulated by
1200 AP-inducing field stimuli. Responsive boutons were selected by an
automated criterion (Fig. 2). Distributions of the FM1-43 uptake
amounts in the two groups indicate that AP stimulation results on
average in 40% more synaptic FM1-43 uptake than miniature activity
during 10 min. For comparison, each histogram is scaled to its maximal
bin value (bin size = 2.5 pixel value).
|
|
Whole-cell patch clamping (Hamill et al., 1981
) was conducted using an
Axon Instruments (Foster City, CA) Axopatch 200B amplifier and 7 M
electrodes pulled from 1.5 mm glass capillaries. The patch pipettes
were filled with a solution containing (in mM): 122 K+MeSO4, 20 NaCl, 5 Mg2+-ATP, 0.3 GTP, and 10 HEPES, 200-300
µM Fluo-3 K+ salt, pH 7.2. Voltage-clamp recordings had APV (60 µM) present in the
extracellular medium to isolate the AMPA-mediated current of the
postsynaptic EPSCs.
For statistical testing of normality, the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was
used. For comparison of the means of normally distributed distributions, the unpaired and paired t test was used as
indicated. The medians of non-Gaussian distributions were compared
using the nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test. For
correlation analysis, the nonparametric Spearman test was used over the
Pearson test when it resulted in a better fit to a linear model.
 |
RESULTS |
Selective FM1-43 loading of synapses with APs and with high rates
of miniature synaptic activity
Using field electrical stimulation and confocal microscopy, we
have been able to image loading and release of the styryl dye FM1-43
from presynaptic boutons of cultured cortical neurons. For FM1-43
uptake into vesicle pools of synaptic boutons (bouton loading), two
different protocols were used. The first protocol consisted of a large
number of AP-inducing field stimuli (1200 pulses at 10 Hz) in the
presence of FM1-43 with continued dye exposure for 60 sec after
stimulation to allow complete endocytosis (Ryan and Smith, 1995
) (Fig.
1). This protocol is expected to result in loading of all synaptic
sites within the electrical field independent of their degree of
miniature activity, which occurs at much lower rates (Murphy et al.,
1995
; Stevens and Sullivan, 1998
; Wang et al., 1999
). Previously, we
had confirmed that each field stimulus reliably elicits a single AP
when recurrent excitation was blocked by a combination of glutamate
receptor antagonists APV and CNQX (Prange and Murphy, 1999
).
The second protocol for FM1-43 bouton loading used conditions that
facilitated spontaneous miniature synaptic activity by elevating
[Ca2+]o to 5 mM (no added
[Mg2+]o) and suppressed
AP-dependent activity using 0.6 µM TTX (Fig. 1). Findings
from our laboratory indicate that most synapses within a neuron have
low rates of miniature activity (
0.01 Hz), but a subpopulation of
synapses exhibits high rates (
0.1 Hz) (Wang et al., 1999
). Based on
these rates we chose FM1-43 exposure times of 10-20 min (in 5 mM [Ca2+]o 0.6 µM TTX) to preferentially load the dye into synapses with high levels of miniature activity. Using these conditions, we were able
to use miniature synaptic activity to load FM1-43 into a vesicle pool
that was releasable by APs (Fig. 2B,D). We confirmed that miniature synaptic activity was enhanced under these conditions by
using whole-cell patch-clamp recordings (n = 5 neurons). These experiments demonstrated that the frequency of
miniature activity was significantly increased (on average, 9.0 ± 5.4-fold; p < 0.05, paired t test) when
[Ca2+]o was elevated from 0 to 5 mM and [Mg2+]o was
decreased in parallel from 5 to 0 mM (Fig.
3A,B). In additional (n = 14) experiments,
we compared the extent of synaptic FM1-43 loading during 13 min dye
exposure under conditions expected to elevate miniature synaptic
activity (5 mM
[Ca2+]o, 0.6 µM
TTX, no added [Mg2+]o) and
suppress it (5 mM
[Mg2+]o, no added
[Ca2+]o), respectively. An
automated procedure was used to quantitatively select FM1-43-stained
boutons from nonspecific background staining (see Materials and
Methods). We found a significant difference in the number of boutons
that loaded FM1-43 into their vesicle pools by miniature synaptic
activity when comparing sister cultures exposed to high versus low
[Ca2+]o during FM1-43 presence. Of
all putative sites tested 7.0% (n = 49 of 700) loaded
in 5 mM [Ca2+]o/0.6
µM TTX, but only in 1.4% (n = 10 of 700)
loaded in the Ca2+-free 5 mM
[Mg2+]o solution
(p < 0.05, unpaired t test) (Fig.
3C). However, the average amount of FM1-43 uptake into
boutons was not different under the different loading conditions (high
[Ca2+]o-loading: 23.4 ± 10.5 pixel value; low [Ca2+]o-loading:
27.3 ± 15.8 pixel value; p > 0.10, unpaired
t test) (Fig. 3D). Taken together, these findings
indicated that, while miniature activity persists at relatively high
levels at a very small number of synapses in an apparently
[Ca2+]o-independent manner, the
elevation of [Ca2+]o greatly
facilitates the total number of synapses that reach these high levels
of miniature activity.
Next, in (n = 17) experiments we compared the amounts
of synaptic FM1-43 uptake between boutons loaded by miniature synaptic activity during 10 min versus boutons loaded by 1200 AP-inducing field
stimuli (controls). To accurately measure synaptic FM1-43 in both
groups, identical imaging settings were used, and out-of-focus correction for the FM1-43 fluorescence of each bouton was used (see
Materials and Methods). We found that synaptic FM1-43 uptake during
1200 field stimuli (eight experiments; n = 822 boutons) exceeded the FM1-43 uptake during 10 min of miniature activity (nine
experiments; n = 335 boutons) significantly by an
average of 40% (p < 0.0001, Mann-Whitney
U test) (Fig. 4). These results indicated that miniature
activity during 10 min results in detectable, yet submaximal FM1-43
uptake into vesicle pools of a subpopulation of synaptic boutons.
After FM1-43 loading and excess dye washout (Fig. 1; see Materials and
Methods), we could show that FM1-43 fluorescence was associated with
the loading of synaptic vesicle pools by eliciting dye unloading with
AP-inducing field stimulation (Fig. 2). Because of the lipophilic
nature of FM1-43 (Betz et al., 1996
) it is possible to have background
staining, even after extensive dye washout. Hence, we developed an
automated procedure to identify synaptic terminals based on their
individual signal-to-noise ratio and their FM1-43 unloading response
after field stimulation (Fig. 2). This automated procedure selected
putative boutons (i.e., punctate FM1-43 spots of <2.6
µm2) for further analysis only if they showed a
net reduction in fluorescence during field stimulation and if their
baseline variance was low relative to the amount of release (Fig.
2C,D; see Materials and Methods). Using this
procedure, we were able to sort responding from nonresponding putative
boutons. Furthermore, it allowed us to select a group of boutons with
"high miniature activity" based on their degree of FM1-43 loading.
We are aware that the binary distinction created by the criterion does
not necessarily reflect a biological threshold. However, it made it
possible to analyze the data with a minimized impact of observer bias.
For (control) experiments in which FM1-43 loading was achieved by
field stimulation, we found that 62% (n = 2439 of
3920) of small punctate FM1-43 staining structures exhibited
significant unloading in response to a 10 Hz stimulus train, and
therefore were likely to be synaptic boutons. In contrast, for
experiments that used miniature synaptic activity (and not APs) to load
FM1-43, only 14% of putative synaptic boutons (n = 1617 of 11050) were selected by the automated criteria. These results
indicate that only a subpopulation of 23% (14%
62%) of synaptic
boutons exhibit sufficient miniature activity during 10-20 min to load
a significant amount of FM1-43 into their vesicle pools that is
releasable by APs (Fig. 2, compare A, B). Although this procedure did not give us a quantitative measure of
vesicular turnover caused by miniature activity, it provided us with a
method to select a subpopulation of CNS terminals based on their degree
of miniature synaptic activity.
Comparison of release rates between synapses with high miniature
activity and a control population
After establishing conditions under which we could reliably load
FM1-43 into synaptic boutons with miniature activity, our aim was to
compare the release probability (Prel) at
sites loaded by miniature activity versus (control) sites loaded by AP
stimulation. To estimate the Prel at synapses of
both groups (see Appendix, Eqs. 1, 2), the initial rate of FM1-43
fluorescence release during 15 sec of a low-frequency (2 Hz) stimulus
train (in 2.5 mM
[Ca2+]o, 1.0 mM
[Mg2+]o) was determined (Fig.
5A,B). Over this time period,
we observed a linear decrease in FM1-43 fluorescence in both groups
(linear regression; r =
1.0; p < 0.0001), indicating that little depression occurred (Fig.
5B). To determine whether differences in FM1-43 release
rates between boutons were attributed to nonspecific dye loss, we
analyzed FM1-43 fluorescence changes during a baseline period
identical in length (15 sec) to that one used for calculation of
AP-evoked FM1-43 release (Fig. 1; see Materials and Methods). We found
unspecific FM1-43 fluorescence decrease during a 15 sec baseline
period to be relatively small (0.16% for miniature loaded synapses;
0.55% for AP-loaded controls) compared with the decrease observed
during 15 sec of 2 Hz field stimulation (12.1% for miniature loaded
synapses; 9.8% for AP-loaded controls). Moreover, as our analysis
showed no positive correlation between FM1-43 baseline changes and
evoked release (correlation coefficient r =
0.18 for
miniature-loaded synapses; r =
0.18 for AP-loaded
synapses), evoked release rates were not corrected for baseline
variation.

View larger version (22K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Synapses with high miniature synaptic activity
show significantly enhanced AP-dependent vesicular release.
A, AP-evoked FM1-43 release was monitored at two groups
of synaptic boutons loaded by distinct protocols. Average FM1-43
bouton fluorescence versus time for (n = 842)
synapses loaded under miniature activity-promoting conditions
(Miniature-loaded) and
(n = 1014) control synapses loaded by APs
(AP-loaded). Boutons were unloaded by a 2 and 10 Hz AP-producing stimulus protocol in 2.5 mM
[Ca2+]o (Fig. 1). Background
fluorescence remaining after a 10 Hz AP train (1200 stimuli) was
subtracted from each bouton, and bouton fluorescence was normalized to
FM1-43 loading (average baseline fluorescence between 35-45 sec).
Lightning bolt depicts onset of AP-inducing electrical
field stimulation. B, Magnification of FM1-43
fluorescence traces in boxed region from
A. AP-evoked FM1-43 release at each synapse during 30 APs was calculated by averaging data points from 50-60 sec and
subtracting this value from the FM1-43 loading (100%). Error bars
indicate SEM. C, Cumulative frequency plot shows that
evoked FM1-43 release is shifted toward higher release values at
miniature-loaded sites as compared with AP-loaded controls.
|
|
Absolute amounts of FM1-43 release from vesicle pools depend on the
degree of vesicle pool loading (see Appendix, Eq. 2). As vesicle pool
loading was expected to differ between the different loading protocols
(Fig. 4), we normalized stimulus-evoked FM1-43 fluorescence changes
(
F) to baseline fluorescence (F) for each bouton
(Fig. 5A,B) (see Appendix, Eq. 2). Using the initial
normalized rate of release (
F/F during 15 sec
of 2 Hz field stimulation), we were able to pool data from a large
number of experiments (n = 22 miniature-loaded;
n = 19 AP-loaded) in each group. Comparison of the
AP-evoked release rates between miniature-loaded and AP-loaded synapses
showed that (n = 842) synapses with high levels of
miniature activity released significantly more FM1-43 per stimulus
than (n = 1014) control sites loaded by APs (24%
difference; p < 0.0001) (Fig. 5C).
Calcium dependency of enhanced release rates at synapses with high
levels of miniature synaptic activity
Because our data suggested that synapses with high miniature
synaptic activity release more FM1-43 per stimulus than control synapses, we further characterized this relationship under conditions expected to change release probability. Therefore,
[Ca2+]o was altered to 1.0 and 5.0 mM to either reduce or increase release probability
(Prel), respectively. In these
experiments (as for the experiments in 2.5 [Ca2+]o) FM1-43 baseline
fluorescence variation did not contribute significantly to the rates of
FM1-43 release during stimulation. As expected, we found that
decreasing [Ca2+]o from 2.5 to 1.0 mM (n = 8 experiments) reduced the average AP-dependent FM1-43 release significantly in both miniature-loaded (by
25%; p < 0.005; n = 335) and
AP-loaded (by 34%; p < 0.001; n = 822) synapses (Fig.
6A,B). Conversely,
increasing [Ca2+]o from 2.5 to 5.0 mM (n = 12 experiments) significantly
enhanced AP-dependent release in miniature-loaded (by 24%;
p < 0.001; n = 440) and AP-loaded (by
43%; p < 0.001; n = 603) boutons
(Fig. 6C,D). These results suggest that
Prel could be altered in a
[Ca2+]o-dependent manner.

View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
The difference in release rates between synapses
with high miniature activity and controls is dependent on
[Ca2+]o. FM1-43 loading was performed
for two groups of synaptic boutons using specific loading protocols as
described above (Fig. 1). For AP-evoked FM1-43 unloading,
[Ca2+]o levels were changed to alter
release probability as indicated. A, B,
Conditions of reduced release probability (1.0 mM
[Ca2+]o). Average trace
(A) and cumulative frequency plot
(B) of FM1-43 release during the first 15 sec of
AP-producing field stimulation. The difference in the average release
rate between sites loaded by high miniature activity
(Miniature-loaded) and
(AP-loaded) controls is 39.1%; it is
larger than the difference in 2.5 [Ca2+]o (compare with Fig. 5).
C, D, Conditions of high release
probability (5.0 mM
[Ca2+]o). Averaged trace
(C) and cumulative frequency plot
(D) of FM1-43 release during the first 15 sec of
stimulation. The average FM1-43 release rate is not significantly
different between the groups (7%; p > 0.05;
unpaired t test). Lightning bolt depicts
onset of AP-inducing field stimulation. Error bars indicate SEM.
|
|
We then analyzed how [Ca2+]o affected
the difference in unloading rates between synapse populations loaded by
miniature activity versus (AP-loaded) controls. When decreasing
[Ca2+]o to 1 mM during
stimulation, we observed a significant difference in the mean release
rate (mean difference, 39%; p < 0.0001, unpaired t test) between the two groups (Fig.
6A,B). This mean difference (39%) exceeded the one
obtained when comparing unloading between the groups in 2.5 mM [Ca2+]o (24%; Fig. 5).
Conversely, elevating [Ca2+]o to 5 mM during stimulation reduced the difference in mean
release rates between groups to a nonsignificant level (mean
difference, 7%; p > 0.05, unpaired t test)
(Fig. 6C,D). Whereas the AP-dependent unloading rates of
controls increased by on average 85% when elevating from 1 to 5 mM, the unloading rates of miniature-loaded sites increased
at the same time by only 45%. This data suggests that synapses with
high levels of miniature activity possess on average a high initial
Prel (compared with controls) that restricts
further increases by elevation of
[Ca2+]o.
The probability for miniature and AP-dependent release is
correlated at single CNS synapses
To more directly determine the relationship between miniature and
evoked release probability, we designed experiments to directly measure
both parameters at the same synapse (see Materials and Methods; Fig.
7A). Therefore, synapses were
first loaded using a field stimulation protocol (four 10 Hz trains of
300 APs) that was expected to saturate vesicle pools with FM1-43 (Ryan
and Smith, 1995
) and then unloaded by field stimulation (Fig.
7A, Trial 1). Consecutively, the same
synapse population was exposed to FM1-43 under miniature
activity-promoting conditions (Fig. 7A, Trial 2). An automated procedure selected synapses for analysis
that showed both significant AP-dependent and -independent FM1-43
turnover (see Materials and Methods). This approach allowed us to
independently measure AP-dependent Prel (i.e.,
the amount of FM1-43 release in response to field stimulation) and
miniature Prel (i.e., the amount of FM1-43
uptake by miniature activity = Pmini) at the same synapse (see Appendix,
Eqs. 3, 4).

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Measures of AP-evoked release probability and
miniature release probability are positively correlated at single
synaptic boutons. A, Synaptic boutons were loaded with
FM1-43 using a large number of AP-inducing field stimuli (4 × 300) to saturate vesicle pools (Trial 1 AP-loading). After washing, the change in
FM1-43 fluorescence during 30 APs was recorded as a measure of evoked
release probability (Prel). After
this measurement, the same synapse population was reloaded with FM1-43
under miniature activity-promoting conditions (5 mM
Ca2+/0.6 µM TTX) for 10 min
(Trial 2 Miniature-loading). The amount
FM1-43 fluorescence uptake during that time was a measure of the
probability of miniature activity
(Pmini) of the synapse. An automated
criterion was applied to select responsive from nonresponsive sites in
both trials (see Materials and Methods). B, A
significant positive correlation between
Pmini and Pevoked
(r = 0.59; p < 0.0001) was
observed at (n = 143) synaptic boutons (7 experiments).
|
|
Using this protocol, we were able to identify presynaptic boutons that
loaded FM1-43 into their vesicle pools with both AP stimulation and
miniature activity (n = 143 boutons; seven
experiments). Analysis of the stimulus-evoked dye release at these
sites demonstrated a significant positive correlation
(r = 0.59; p < 0.0001) between AP-dependent release probability (Prel;
FM1-43 released during 15 sec of 2 Hz stimulation) and miniature
frequency (Pmini; FM1-43 uptake during
10 min exposure in high
[Ca2+]o/TTX) at single boutons
(Fig. 7B). A similar positive correlation between
Prel and Pmini
(r = 0.58; p < 0.0001) was found when
normalizing the FM1-43 release amounts to the median value in each
trial before pooling the data (data not shown), indicating that the
relationship was not caused by differences in absolute release amounts
between experiments. These findings suggested that AP-evoked and
AP-independent miniature release rates are co-regulated at synaptic boutons.
Miniature activity and AP-dependent release probability are
functions of vesicle pool size
As outlined above (see Materials and Methods), we used a field
stimulus protocol that was expected to result in complete loading of
synaptic vesicle pools (Ryan and Smith, 1995
) (Fig. 7A) to provide us with a measure of vesicle pool size, and thus synapse size
(Henkel et al., 1996
). Using this approach, we estimated the size of
the (n = 143) presynaptic boutons that were
consecutively reloaded in a miniature activity-promoting medium (see
above section, Fig. 7A). Comparison between this measure of
synapse size (the total amount of releasable fluorescence) and the
measure of miniature frequency (the amount of FM1-43 uptake by
miniature activity = Pmini)
indicated that both parameters were significantly correlated (r = 0.64; p < 0.0001) at single
synaptic sites (Fig. 8). This suggested
that the size of the synaptic bouton is related to the extent of
spontaneous release and, hence, that larger synapses on average possess
higher levels of miniature synaptic activity. A similar correlation was
found between synapse (vesicle pool) size and AP-dependent release
probability at single synaptic boutons (r = 0.57;
p < 0.0001; data not shown), confirming previously reported findings (Rosenmund and Stevens, 1996
; Murthy et al., 1997
).

View larger version (26K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
The probability for miniature activity is
positively correlated with a measure of bouton size. Data from the same
experiments shown in Figure 7. A significant positive correlation
(r = 0.64; p < 0.0001) is
found between the amount of FM1-43 uptake during 10 min incubation in
a miniature activity-promoting medium
(Pmini) and the amount of FM1-43
loading by 1200 APs, a measure of bouton size.
|
|
Because the vesicle pool size of a synapse is inversely proportional to
its fractional release rate (see Appendix, Eq. 2), we compared vesicle
pool sizes between boutons with high rates of miniature synaptic
activity and a control population. This comparison is important because
the reported difference in fractional release rates (Figs. 5, 6) could
potentially be caused by a systematic difference in the average pool
size of the groups (see Appendix, Eq. 2). Therefore, from the
experiments shown in Figures 7 and 8, a control population of synapses
was selected solely based on its FM1-43 unloading response to
AP-inducing field stimulation (Fig. 7A, Trial
1). The synaptic vesicle pool size of this group was
compared with the pool size of synapses that, in addition to fulfilling
the response criterion for controls, also exhibited significant FM1-43
uptake with miniature activity in the reloading trial (Fig.
7A, Trial 2). This experiment differs from
those presented in Figures 5 and 6 in that synapses with high miniature
activity and control synapses were selected from the same culture
(synapse population) and were loaded using identical protocols. After
normalizing the AP-mediated FM1-43 fluorescence release to the amount
of loading (see Appendix, Eq. 2), we found that sites with high
miniature activity release 20% more FM1-43 during 30 pulses of 2 Hz
AP stimulation than the control group (p < 0.0001, unpaired t test). This value is comparable to that
reported comparing sister cultures loaded with different protocols
(24%; Fig. 5C). This finding confirms that the
proportionality between release probability and vesicle pool size (see
Appendix, Eq. 2) differs between the groups of synapses with high
miniature activity and controls. Furthermore, comparison of the average
vesicle pool size between these two groups demonstrated that vesicle
pools were significantly larger at synapses with high miniature
activity (difference in size, 29%; p < 0.0001; Mann-Whitney U test) (Fig.
9A). This indicates that the
difference in the fractional release rates between synapses with high
miniature activity and control synapses cannot be accounted for by a
relative larger size of control synapses. In fact, the relatively
larger average size of miniature-loaded boutons (compared with
controls) suggests that the difference in Prel
between the groups (calculated based on fractional release rates; see
Appendix, Eq. 2) is likely an underestimate, because fractional release
in inversely proportional to pool size. Accordingly, we compared the
absolute amounts of evoked FM1-43 release during AP stimulation
between the two groups. Absolute FM1-43 release is a measure for
Prel that is not influenced by the vesicle pool
size of the synapse (see Appendix, Eq. 3). This comparison showed that
boutons with high rates of miniature activity release on average 59%
more FM1-43 fluorescence per stimulus than the control group recruited
from same population of synapses (Fig. 9B).

View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 9.
Boutons with high levels of miniature synaptic
activity possess larger vesicle pools and release more vesicles per
stimulus train. Synapse (vesicle pool) size and release probability
(Prel) were compared between two
groups of boutons recruited from an identical population using the
reloading protocol described above (Fig. 7A). Both
groups had to show FM1-43 uptake and release during AP stimulation and
were sorted based on their ability to reload FM1-43 under miniature
synaptic activity-promoting conditions. To pass the automated selection
procedure in each respective trial, the baseline variation of the
boutons had to be <10% of its total releasable fluorescence (Fig. 2).
A, Histograms of bouton sizes measured by FM1-43 bouton
loading with 1200 APs (bin size = 7.5 pixel values). Top
panel, Bouton sizes of control sites (n = 381) that were selected based on their response to field stimulation.
Bottom panel, Bouton sizes of synapses
(n = 114) that, in addition to matching the
criterion for the control group, showed significant FM1-43 uptake
under miniature activity-promoting conditions (high
Pmini sites). Significant difference (29%;
p < 0.0001, Mann-Whitney U test)
in the average bouton size between the two groups. B,
The average amount of FM1-43 release in response to 30 APs was
compared between the two groups in shown in A. Note that
this measure of Prel is independent of
bouton size (see Appendix, Eq. 3). Evoked FM1-43 release is increased
by 59% (p < 0.0001, Mann-Whitney
U test) at boutons with high miniature synaptic activity
(high Pmini sites) compared with
controls.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
We have used confocal imaging of the vesicular turnover marker
FM1-43 to study evoked transmitter release at synapses with high rates
of miniature synaptic activity. Using this experimental approach to
directly measure transmitter release rather than its postsynaptic
effect, we were able compare the AP-dependent release efficacies among
single synaptic sites. The use of FM1-43 as a vesicle-turnover marker
has two important advantages for our study: it allowed us (1) to
selectively stain synapses with high miniature activity; and (2) to
compare the release rates between individual synapses under conditions
that are not affected by postsynaptic responsiveness. Our results
indicate that synapses with high rates of miniature activity possess on
average enhanced AP-evoked release probabilities when compared with
controls. Furthermore, by directly measuring both the probability of
miniature synaptic activity and AP-evoked release at the same synapse,
we find that the two parameters are significantly correlated. These
findings suggest a co-regulation of miniature synaptic activity and
AP-evoked release probability at presynaptic terminals. Therefore,
miniature rates may indicate the readiness of the vesicle release
machinery to discharge a transmitter quanta in the presence of an
appropriate stimulus.
Miniature synaptic activity has been well described in the CNS and PNS.
However, it remains to be shown whether miniature synaptic activity
serves a specific function in synaptic transmission or is just a
stochastic process. Because miniature synaptic activity is modifiable
(Malgaroli and Tsien, 1992
; Chavis et al., 1998
), it argues for the
first point. Furthermore, recent findings indicate that at some synapse
types miniature activity is involved in the developmental formation
(Gottmann et al., 1994
; O'Brien et al., 1997
) as well as in the
structural maintenance of synaptic connections (McKinney et al., 1999
).
As rates of miniature synaptic activity are upregulated after the
induction of short-term (Kamiya and Zucker, 1994
; Cummings et al.,
1996
; for review, see Zucker, 1996
; Fisher et al., 1997
) and long-term
(Minota et al., 1991
; Malgaroli and Tsien, 1992
; Arancio et al., 1995
;
Tong et al., 1996
; Chen and Regehr, 1997
; but see Cormier and Kelly,
1996
) synaptic enhancement, a possible role for miniature release could
be the selective maintenance of such synaptic connections that have
received context relevant priming in an activity-dependent manner.
There are additional findings indicating that miniature and evoked
release probability are co-regulated at synaptic terminals. For
example, inhibition of synaptotagmin in cholinergic synapses (Mochida
et al., 1997
), activation of muscarinic receptors on GABAergic neurons
(Baba et al., 1998
), BDNF treatment of hippocampal cells (Li et al., 1998
), and activation of cannabinoid receptors on Purkinje cells (Levenes et al., 1998
) all induce parallel modulation of miniature and
evoked release rates. Our results support findings of an
activity-dependent co-regulation of both miniature and evoked
transmitter release by showing (1) that synapses with high miniature
activity possess on average significantly enhanced AP-dependent release
rates (Figs. 5, 6, 9B); and (2) that there exists a
correlation between miniature and evoked release probability at single
synapses (Fig. 7B).
Miniature release can be regulated in a
[Ca2+]i-independent manner by agents
that directly affect the presynaptic release machinery, e.g.,
-latrotoxin (Ceccarelli et al., 1988
; Capogna et al., 1996a
,b
) or
ruthenium red (Trudeau et al., 1996
). However, under physiological conditions, a strong [Ca2+]i
dependence of miniature synaptic activity is well documented (Matthews
and Wickelgren, 1977
; Marcus et al., 1992
; Doze et al., 1995
; Katz et
al., 1995
; Scanziani et al., 1995
; Capogna et al., 1996a
, 1997
;
Poisbeau et al., 1996
; Schoppa and Westbrook, 1997
; Bao et al., 1998
;
Li et al., 1998
). Using somatic recordings, we confirmed these findings
by showing significantly enhanced rates of miniature activity after the
elevation of [Ca2+]o from 0 to 5 mM (see Results). Accordingly, we found that
[Ca2+]o elevation from 0 to 5 mM lead to a significant increase in the number boutons
that were labeled by FM1-43 with miniature synaptic activity. These
results are consistent with findings by Chavis et al. (1998)
and Ma et
al. (1999)
, suggesting that activation of the cAMP-dependent protein
kinase PKA, a downstream target of Ca2+, induces
vesicular cycling at previously inactive uptake sites. A small number
of synapses (~1%), however, showed continued high rates of FM1-43
uptake by miniature activity under nominally
[Ca2+]o-free conditions comparable to
those rates achieved in high [Ca2+]o.
This surprising finding indicates that a subpopulation of synapses can
sustain high rates of miniature activity even in low
[Ca2+]o. The inability to resolve a
difference in the amount of FM1-43 uptake between the two groups
loaded in high versus low [Ca2+]o may
also be attributed to the use of an automated criterion that selects
synapses only if they show a sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (see
Materials and Methods).
In contrast to AP-dependent release (Haage et al., 1998
),
Ca2+ seems to mediate its effects on miniature
release by entry through low-threshold rather than high-threshold VGCCs
(Parfitt and Madison, 1993
; Momiyama and Takahashi, 1994
; Scanziani et
al., 1995
; Bao et al., 1998
), indicating the existence of differential
control mechanisms over both forms of transmitter release. Moreover,
Ca2+ does not seem to act directly on the release
machinery to mediate miniature release, but rather indirectly through
activation of second messenger systems such as PKC (Malenka et al.,
1986
; Parfitt and Madison, 1993
; Capogna et al., 1995
; Stevens and
Sullivan, 1998
; Carroll et al., 1998
) and PKA (Chavez-Noriega and
Stevens, 1994
; Capogna et al., 1995
; Carroll et al., 1998
; Chavis et
al., 1998
). Kondo and Marty (1997)
and Chen and Regehr (1997)
show that
PKA activation alone is sufficient to stimulate miniature synaptic
release even in the absence of
[Ca2+]o. There are additional findings
indicating the existence of molecular pathways that differentially
affect miniature and evoked release, including the activation of
noradrenaline (Kondo and Marty, 1998
) and adenosine (Dittman and
Regehr, 1996
) receptors and the differential regulation of release
machinery proteins (Deitcher et al., 1998
; Hua et al., 1998
). If
differential mechanisms exist to independently regulate miniature and
evoked transmitter release, how could a co-regulation of both forms of
release be achieved? A plausible explanation would be an
activity-dependent switch from separate to parallel regulation of
miniature and evoked release. Such a switch could conceivably be
induced by a strong stimulus (e.g., pulse train) triggering the
activation of common intracellular second-messengers, e.g.,
upregulation of PKA (Byrne and Kandel, 1996
; Tong et al., 1996
; Chavis
et al., 1998
; Lonart and Südhof, 1998
; Villacres et al., 1998
) or
PKC (Leahy et al., 1993
; Ramakers et al., 1997
; Majewski and Iannazzo,
1998
) above a certain threshold. An activity-dependent switch from
separate to parallel regulation of evoked and miniature release is
supported by findings showing that after parallel upregulation of
miniature and evoked release rates, miniature synaptic release also
becomes sensitive to agents that block high-threshold VGCCs (Scanziani et al., 1995
).
It has been suggested that a potential mechanism for controlling
synaptic activity is the regulation of synaptic structure (Calverley
and Jones, 1990
; Bailey and Kandel, 1993
; Lisman and Harris, 1993
;
Harris and Sultan, 1995
; Edwards, 1995
; Buchs and Müller, 1996
;
Rusakov et al., 1997
; Mackenzie et al., 1999
). Our results indicate
that the degree of miniature synaptic activity is positively correlated
with the size of the vesicle pool (Fig. 8), and thus the size of the
synaptic terminal (Henkel et al., 1996
). Correspondingly, we find that
synapses with high levels of miniature activity are on average larger
than synapses drawn from a control population (Fig. 9A).
These results confirm findings that show a similar relationship between
synapse size and AP-dependent release efficacy (Murthy et al., 1997
;
Prange and Murphy, 1999
). Furthermore, they suggest a model in which
the frequency of miniature release can be controlled by the number of
readily releasable and/or docked vesicles, both parameters which
significantly correlate with terminal size (Dobrunz and Stevens, 1997
;
Schikorski and Stevens, 1997
). Hence, modifications of synaptic
structure could build the anatomical basis for controlling evoked and
miniature release rates.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 23, 1999; revised April 21, 1999; accepted May 21, 1999.
This work was funded by an operating grant from the Medical Research
Council (MRC) of Canada and the EJLB foundation. O.P. was supported by
scholarships of the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (HSP-III)
and the Heinrich-Hertz-Stiftung. T.H.M. is an EJLB and MRC
Scholar. We thank S. Wang and P. Mackenzie for assistance in
culture preparations and for helpful comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Murphy at the above address.
 |
APPENDIX |
We have used the after equations to describe the relationship
between stimulus-evoked FM1-43 release and release probability in our
experiments:
|
(1)
|
Equation 1 describes the proposed relationship between the amount
of FM1-43 released per stimulus (Frel),
the proportion of FM1-43-loaded vesicles
(VesFM1-43) to the total size of the vesicle
pool (Vestotal), and the fluorescence of
a single vesicle (Fves), a constant. The
number of FM1-43-loaded vesicles (VesFM1-43)
was expected to differ depending on the protocol used for FM1-43
loading (AP loading vs miniature loading). Therefore, to compare the
FM1-43 release rates between AP- and miniature-loaded groups the
amount of FM1-43 release per stimulus
(Frel) was normalized to the total amount
of FM1-43-loaded vesicles (VesFM1-43) at each
synapse:
|
(2)
|
Equation 2 was derived from Equation 1 by dividing by
VesFM1-43 and shows that the normalized
(fractional) rate of stimulus evoked fluorescence
(Frel(norm) = Frel/VesFM1-43) is directly proportional to the release probability
(Prel) and inversely proportional to the
total size of the vesicle pool
(Vestotal).
|
(3)
|
Equation 3 shows the relationship between the amount of FM1-43
released per stimulus (Frel) and the
release probability (Prel) for
experiments in which a large number of stimuli (4 × 300) were used to saturate synaptic vesicle pools with FM1-43 (Ryan and Smith,
1995
). In this case, the number of FM1-43-loaded vesicles (VesFM1-43) would approach the total size of
the vesicle pool (Vestotal) and, hence,
amount of fluorescence released per stimulus
(Frel) would be directly proportional to
the release probability (Prel). This
equation was derived from Equation 1 setting
(VesFM1-43/Vestotal) = 1.
|
(4)
|
Equation 4 describes the relationship between the amount of
FM1-43 uptake (Fuptake) and release
probability (Prel) (Murthy et al., 1997
,
their Eq. 1). The equation is essentially derived from Equation 3 by
replacing Frel with
Fuptake. This can be done under the following
conditions: (1) vesicle exocytosis and endocytosis are matched, i.e.,
for each vesicle released one vesicle will be retrieved. This is most
likely the case for [Ca2+]o used in
our experiments (Smith and Betz, 1996
; Gad et al., 1998
; Rouze and
Schwarz, 1998
). (2) FM1-43-loaded vesicles intermingle with the rest
of the pool and are not preferably released. This has been indicated by
Ryan and Smith (1995)
. (3) Fuptake is not maximal, so it is not limited by the pool size. This is most likely the
case in experiments using miniature activity for FM1-43 uptake, as
even the highest miniature rates (~0.1 Hz; Wang et al., 1999
) are not
expected to turnover the entire vesicle pool during 10 min. Hence, in
experiments analyzing absolute amounts of FM1-43 fluorescence uptake
in a miniature-promoting medium, we have used Fuptake as a measure of miniature activity and
thus miniature Prel, termed
Pmini.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Arancio O,
Kandel ER,
Hawkins RD
(1995)
Activity-dependent long-term enhancement of transmitter release by presynaptic 3',5'-cyclic GMP in cultured hippocampal neurons.
Nature
376:74-80[Medline].
-
Baba H,
Kohno T,
Okamoto M,
Goldstein PA,
Shimoji K,
Yoshimura M
(1998)
Muscarinic facilitation on GABA release in substantia gelatinosa of the rat spinal dorsal horn.
J Physiol (Lond)
508:83-93[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Bailey CH,
Kandel ER
(1993)
Structural changes accompanying memory storage.
Annu Rev Physiol
55:397-426[ISI][Medline].
-
Bao J,
Li JJ,
Perl ER
(1998)
Differences in Ca2+ channels governing generation of miniature and evoked excitatory synaptic currents in spinal laminae 1 and 2.
J Neurosci
18:8740-8750[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Betz WJ,
Bewick GS
(1992)
Optical analysis of synaptic vesicle recycling at the frog neuromuscular junction.
Science
255:200-203