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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 1, 2000, 20(3):949-957
Ca2+ Influx Inhibits Dynamin and Arrests Synaptic
Vesicle Endocytosis at the Active Zone
Michael A.
Cousin and
Phillip J.
Robinson
Cell Signaling Unit, Children's Medical Research Institute,
Wentworthville 2145, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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ABSTRACT |
Ca2+ entry into nerve terminals through clusters
of voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels (VDCCs) at active
zones creates a microdomain of elevated intracellular free
Ca2+ concentration
([Ca2+]i) that stimulates
exocytosis. We show that this VDCC-mediated [Ca2+]i elevation has no specific role
in stimulating endocytosis but can inhibit endocytosis evoked by three
different methods in isolated mammalian nerve terminals. The inhibition
can be relieved by using either VDCC antagonists or fast, but not slow,
binding intracellular Ca2+ chelators. The
Ca2+-dependent inhibition of endocytosis is mimicked
in vitro by a low-affinity inhibition of dynamin I
vesiculation of phospholipids. Increased
[Ca2+]i also inhibits dynamin II
GTPase activity and receptor-mediated endocytosis in non-neuronal
cells. VDCC-meditated Ca2+ entry inhibits
dynamin-mediated endocytosis at the active zone and provides neurons
with a mechanism to clear recycling vesicles to nonactive zone regions
during periods of high activity.
Key words:
endocytosis; exocytosis; FM2-10; dynamin; calcium; nerve
terminal
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INTRODUCTION |
Synaptic transmission relies on the
stimulation of neurotransmitter release by exocytosis of synaptic
vesicles and subsequent vesicle retrieval by endocytosis. Exocytosis
and endocytosis are assumed to be intimately coupled in the CNS
(Neher, 1998 ) because synaptic transmission can be maintained by a very
small pool of recycling synaptic vesicles (Ryan, 1996 ). One possible
mechanism by which the two processes could be coupled is influx of
extracellular Ca2+ through
voltage-dependent Ca2+ channels (VDCCs).
Exocytosis is stimulated by VDCC-mediated
Ca2+ influx in nerve terminals at
subsynaptic regions called active zones in which there is a higher
density of VDCCs than the surrounding nonactive zones (Wu et al.,
1999 ). VDCC activation evokes a large localized increase in
intracellular free Ca2+ concentration
([Ca2+]i) of at
least 200 µM within the active zone that stimulates exocytosis (Heidelberger et al., 1994 ; Neher, 1998 ). The microdomains of high [Ca2+]i
created by VDCC clustering are essential for exocytosis because the
Ca2+ receptor that stimulates the process,
thought to be synaptotagmin, possesses a very low affinity for
Ca2+ (Brose et al., 1992 ).
Increases in
[Ca2+]i also
stimulate endocytosis in excitable cells (Thomas et al., 1994 ; Artalejo
et al., 1995 , 1996 ; Engisch and Nowycky, 1998 ) and central neurons
(Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ; Guatimosim et al., 1998 ; Klingauf et al.,
1998 ; Marks and McMahon, 1998 ). The Ca2+
receptor responsible for triggering endocytosis has been proposed to be
calmodulin (Artalejo et al., 1996 ; Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ; Marks and
McMahon, 1998 ), which stimulates a dephosphorylation pathway mediated
by calcineurin in nerve terminals (Liu et al., 1994 ; Marks and McMahon,
1998 ). This pathway has a much higher affinity for
Ca2+ (in the nanomolar range)
(Nichols and Suplick, 1996 ) than the low-affinity receptor for
exocytosis. Therefore, the observed close coupling between exocytosis
and endocytosis might be attributable to the fact that much
lower increases in
[Ca2+]i are
required to stimulate synaptic vesicle retrieval during exocytosis,
ensuring that endocytosis is always activated with all stimuli.
Not all studies show that Ca2+ is required
for synaptic vesicle retrieval. Ca2+ has
been proposed to play no role in endocytosis at central and neuromuscular synapses (Ramaswami et al., 1994 ; Ryan et al., 1996 ; Wu
and Betz, 1996 ) and elevated
[Ca2+]i inhibits
synaptic vesicle retrieval in goldfish ribbon synapses (Von Gersdorff
and Matthews, 1994 , 1997 ). Therefore, the role for
Ca2+ in endocytosis still requires
clarification. One unifying explanation is that
Ca2+ may have multiple roles in synaptic
vesicle retrieval. This could be achieved by taking advantage of the
different [Ca2+]i
gradients within the neuron upon stimulation. For example, microdomains
of high [Ca2+]i at
the active zone may have a specific effect on synaptic vesicle retrieval or, alternatively, different routes of
Ca2+ entry may differentially modulate
endocytosis. We have addressed these questions in isolated nerve
terminals by investigating the role in endocytosis of VDCC-mediated
Ca2+ influx and the high localized
Ca2+ microdomains they generate. We report
that VDCC-mediated Ca2+ influx does not
specifically play a role in stimulating synaptic vesicle retrieval but
that it inhibits endocytosis at the active zone during prolonged
stimulation. This inhibitory pathway may provide a feedback mechanism
for uncoupling exocytosis and endocytosis, which may relocate synaptic
vesicle retrieval to nonactive zone regions under conditions of intense stimulation.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Materials. FM2-10, BAPTA-AM, EGTA-AM, fura-2 AM, and
Texas Red-conjugated transferrin were obtained from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR). -Agatoxin-IVA was obtained from the Peptide Institute (Osaka, Japan). -Conotoxin-GVIA and -Conotoxin-MVIIC were
obtained from Bachem (Saffron-Walden, UK). Ionomycin was obtained from Calbiochem/Novabiochem (Alexandria, Australia).
[ -32P]GTP was obtained from NEN
(Boston, MA). All other reagents were obtained from Sigma (Poole, UK).
Glutamate release assay. Synaptosomes were prepared from rat
cerebral cortex by centrifugation on discontinuous percoll gradients (Dunkley et al., 1986 ). The glutamate release assay was performed using
enzyme-linked fluorescent detection of released glutamate (Nicholls and
Sihra, 1986 ; Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ). Briefly, synaptosomes (0.6 mg
in 2 ml) were resuspended in either plus (1.2 mM
CaCl2) or minus (1 mM EGTA)
Ca2+ Krebs'-like solution (in
mM: 118.5 NaCl, 4.7 KCl, 1.18 MgCl2, 0.1 Na2HPO4, 20 HEPES, and 10 glucose, pH 7.4) at
37°C. Experiments were started after addition of 1 mM
NADP+ and, after 1 min, 50 U of glutamate
dehydrogenase was added and the synaptosome suspension was stimulated
after 4 min with either KCl, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) or ionomycin,
respectively. Increases in fluorescence caused by production of NADPH
were monitored in a Perkin-Elmer (Emeryville, CA) LS-50B
spectrofluorimeter at 340 nm excitation and 460 nm emission.
Experiments were standardized by the addition of 4 nmol of glutamate.
Data are presented as Ca2+-dependent
glutamate release, calculated as the difference between release in plus
and minus Ca2+ solution for identical
stimulation conditions. In experiments using antagonists, synaptosomes
were preincubated for 2 min with VDCC inhibitors (plus 100 µg/ml
bovine serum albumin) or for 30 min with varying concentrations of
BAPTA-AM or EGTA-AM before stimulation.
Endocytosis assay. Endocytosis was measured using uptake of
the fluorescent dye FM2-10 as described previously (Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ). Synaptosomes (0.6 mg in 2 ml) were incubated for 5 min
at 37°C in plus or minus Ca2+
Krebs'-like solution. FM2-10 (100 µM) was
added 1 min before stimulation with KCl, 4-AP, or ionomycin (S1).
FM2-10 is taken up inside vesicles by endocytosis at the S1 phase of
stimulation; therefore, synaptosomes were incubated with antagonists
during this phase (synaptosomes were incubated with VDCC antagonists for 2 min plus 100 µg/ml bovine serum albumin, and for 30 min with
BAPTA-AM and EGTA-AM). After 2 min of stimulation with KCl, 4-AP, or
ionomycin, synaptosomes were washed twice in plus
Ca2+ solution containing 1 mg/ml bovine
serum albumin. The washing steps remove noninternalized FM2-10 and
extracellular antagonists. Washed synaptosomes were resuspended in plus
Ca2+ solution at 37°C, transferred to a
fluorimeter cuvette, and stimulated with a standard addition of 30 mM KCl (S2). The standard S2 stimulation releases
all accumulated FM2-10 (Marks and McMahon, 1998 ), and therefore
endocytosis can be measured as the decrease in FM2-10 fluorescence
caused by dye release into solution (excitation 488 nm, emission 540 nm). The kinetics of FM2-10 release are slower than observed using
perfused neuronal cultures (Klingauf et al., 1998 ), because the dye is
sill present in the cuvette after its release and is able to rebind
lipid more readily then in a perfusion system.
Endocytosis was calculated as the decrease in absolute fluorescence
from FM2-10-labeled synaptosomes stimulated by 30 mM KCl. The displayed traces in all figures represent the release of FM2-10 from synaptosomes after subtraction of background traces acquired from
synaptosomes loaded with FM2-10 in the absence of
Ca2+. Retrieval efficiency is a more
accurate measure of endocytosis because it takes into account the
amount of previous exocytosis (Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ). Retrieval
efficiency was calculated as endocytosis/exocytosis in which
endocytosis is defined as above and exocytosis as
Ca2+-dependent glutamate release after 2 min of stimulation. The retrieval efficiency value was normalized to a
ratio of 1.0 for 30 mM KCl.
[Ca2+]i
determination. Synaptosome
[Ca2+]i levels
were monitored using fura-2 fluorescence as described previously
(Cousin et al., 1993 ). Briefly, synaptosomes were incubated for 30 min
in plus Ca2+ Krebs' solution supplemented
with 5 µM fura-2 AM and 1 mg/ml bovine serum
albumin. Synaptosomes were washed and resuspended in plus
Ca2+ Krebs' solution. Fura-2 responses
were recorded using a Perkin-Elmer LS-50B spectrophotometer monitoring
excitation at 340 and 380 nm and emission at 505 nm. Fura-2-loaded
synaptosomes were stimulated with KCl, 4-AP, or ionomycin. Synaptosomal
[Ca2+]i values
were taken 20 sec after stimulation and were calculated using the
Grynkiewicz equation (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985 ).
Rmax was obtained by addition of 10%
SDS (final concentration), and Rmin was obtained by addition of 15 mM EGTA (final concentration).
Lipid vesiculation assay. Dynamin I was purified from ovine
brain (Robinson et al., 1993 ). The lipid vesiculation assay was performed as described previously (Sweitzer and Hinshaw, 1998 ) with
minor modifications. Dynamin I (0.25 mg/ml) was incubated with
phosphatidylserine liposomes (0.75 mg/ml) in assembly buffer [in
mM: 20 Tris-HCl, 20 NaCl, 1 EGTA, 1 PMSF, 1 dithiothreitol, and complete protease inhibitors (Roche Products,
Hertforshire, UK), pH 7.4] for 1 hr at room temperature. This allows
dynamin I to assemble around the lipid and form long tubules. After 1 hr, the dynamin-lipid tubules were diluted 10-fold in assembly buffer
and transferred to an LS50-B spectrofluorimeter. After 2 min, 1 mM GTP-MgCl2 was added
(final concentration), which causes dynamin to produce vesicles from
the tubulated lipid. Vesicle production was monitored as a decrease in
90° light scattering at 450 nm with a 4% screen.
CaCl2 was added 2 min before addition of GTP.
Transferrin internalization assay. Transferrin
internalization in HeLa cells was performed as described previously
(van der Bliek et al., 1993 ). Briefly, HeLa cells (plated to 60%
confluency) were removed from culture medium (DMEM plus 10%
fetal calf serum) and incubated in DMEM minus fetal calf serum for 30 min at 37°C. Medium was then removed and replaced with medium
supplemented with 50 µg/ml Texas Red-conjugated transferrin for 10 min. The cells were washed three times with ice-cold PBS
supplemented with 1.2 mM
CaCl2 and 1.2 mM
MgCl2. Cells were immediately fixed using 4%
formaldehyde in PBS for 30 min and then washed three times with PBS.
Cells were mounted on slides using Dabco (Sigma), and fluorescence was
monitored using a Leica (Nussloch, Germany) confocal microscope.
Ionomycin was added simultaneously with Texas Red-conjugated transferrin where indicated.
GTPase assay. The GTPase activity of baculovirus-expressed
dynamin II was determined as described previously (Liu et al., 1996 ).
Briefly, dynamin II (80 µg/ml) was incubated with phosphatidylserine liposomes (10 µg/ml) for 1 hr in GTPase buffer (10 mM NaCl, 1 mM
MgCl2, 0.05% Tween 80, 1 µg/ml leupeptin, 2 mM PMSF, and 10 mM Tris, pH
7.4) at 4°C. After 1 hr and at 30°C, CaCl2 was added to
the dynamin-lipid mixture and, 5 min later,
[ -32P]GTP was added. After 30 min,
hydrolysis of [ -32P]GTP by dynamin II
was terminated by addition of 2% formic acid-8% acetic acid.
Activated charcoal was added to bind the guanosine nucleotides, the
samples were centrifuged in a microfuge, and the supernatant was
counted for released
32Pi. Results are
normalized to control and are presented as stimulation above basal activity.
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RESULTS |
Increasing [Ca2+]i inhibits
endocytosis in isolated nerve terminals
Endocytosis occurs in both the active zone and nonactive zones of
the nerve terminal (Heuser and Reese, 1973 ; Koenig and Ikeda, 1996 ).
Therefore, our first aim was to determine whether a component of
endocytosis may be specifically coupled to activation of VDCCs at the
active zone. Nerve terminals were stimulated with agents that increase
[Ca2+]i by three
distinct mechanisms. KCl depolarizes excitable membranes, greatly
increasing the probability of VDCC opening, and produces localized
increases in
[Ca2+]i at the
pore of VDCCs, which are clustered at active zones (Verhage et al.,
1991 ). 4-AP blocks a presynaptic K+
channel that regulates plasma membrane excitability and thereby induces
transient, Na+ channel-generated membrane
depolarizations similar to action potentials (Tibbs et al., 1989 ). 4-AP
also activates VDCCs and, like KCl, produces localized increases in
[Ca2+]i at the
active zone but without the prolonged depolarization characteristic of
KCl. The ionophore ionomycin raises
[Ca2+]i from all
points across the plasma membrane of the nerve terminal without the
localized increases (Verhage et al., 1991 ). All three stimuli produced
concentration-dependent increases in
Ca2+-dependent glutamate release (Fig.
1A,D,G)
(McMahon and Nicholls, 1991 ; Verhage et al., 1991 ; Sihra et al.,
1992 ).

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Figure 1.
Endocytosis is inversely proportional to
exocytosis with increasing stimulation. A,
D, G, Ca2+-dependent
glutamate release from nerve terminals was stimulated with increasing
concentrations of KCl (A), 4-AP
(D), or ionomycin (IONO;
G) as indicated. The period of stimulation is indicated
by the bar; n = 3-7 (±SEM).
B, E, H, Nerve terminals
were loaded for 2 min with FM2-10 during S1 stimulation, using
increasing concentrations of KCl (B), 4-AP
(E), or ionomycin
(H) in plus Ca2+
medium, with minus Ca2+ medium (1 mM
EGTA) serving as a control. A representative trace of
the subsequent release of loaded FM2-10 (S2) by a standard stimulus of
30 mM KCl is displayed. All traces are
corrected for background uptake by subtracting the minus
Ca2+ trace. Exocytosis is constant during the S2
stimulation; therefore, endocytosis is calculated as the evoked
Ca2+-dependent decrease in absolute fluorescence
units. The period of KCl (30 mM) stimulation is indicated
by the bar; n = 4-5.
C, F, I, Retrieval
efficiency (endocytosis/exocytosis, normalized to 1.0 for 30 mM KCl) for increasing concentrations of KCl
(C), 4-AP (F), or ionomycin
(I). Endocytosis is defined as above, and
exocytosis is Ca2+-dependent glutamate release after
2 min; n = 3-7 (±SEM).
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KCl, 4-AP, and ionomycin all stimulated endocytosis (Fig.
1B,E,H). However,
unlike exocytosis, evoked endocytosis was not always
concentration-dependent. For example, endocytosis decreased with
increasing 4-AP (Fig. 1E) or ionomycin (Fig.
1H) concentrations. This was not because of a reduced
ability of synaptosomes to release the accumulated FM2-10, because
Ca2+-dependent glutamate release was
identical in the S2 phase for all concentrations of either KCl, 4-AP,
or ionomycin (data not shown).
To accurately quantify the amount of endocytosis, the preceding amount
of exocytosis must also be considered, because endocytosis of synaptic
vesicles is dependent on the availability of fused vesicles for
retrieval. A parameter termed retrieval efficiency serves as a more
quantitative measure of endocytosis because it takes this into account
by dividing the amount of endocytosis by exocytosis for the same
stimulus (Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ). In all experiments, retrieval
efficiency is arbitrarily set to 1.0 for loading with 30 mM
KCl. If endocytosis was unaffected by increasing concentrations of KCl,
4-AP, or ionomycin, then retrieval efficiency would be constant for
these different stimuli. However, increasing concentrations of KCl,
4-AP, or ionomycin all decreased retrieval efficiency (Fig.
1C,F,I). Thus,
endocytosis is reduced 4- to 20-fold by increasing the strength of the stimuli.
We next examined whether a particular route of
Ca2+ entry was more efficient in
stimulating either exocytosis or endocytosis. To achieve this,
exocytosis and endocytosis were correlated with the average increases
in [Ca2+]i
produced by KCl, 4-AP, or ionomycin. When
Ca2+-dependent glutamate release was
correlated with the evoked increase in nerve terminal
[Ca2+]i measured
using fura-2, two observations were made (Fig.
2A). First, the amount
of exocytosis correlated with increasing concentrations of
[Ca2+]i. Second,
KCl and 4-AP were more efficient than ionomycin in supporting
exocytosis. This is because much lower
[Ca2+]i increases
evoked by KCl or 4-AP were required to stimulate release over the whole
range of average
[Ca2+]i than
ionomycin. Thus, VDCC-mediated Ca2+ influx
stimulated vesicle fusion more efficiently than the ionomycin-induced global increase in
[Ca2+]i (McMahon
and Nicholls, 1991 ; Verhage et al., 1991 ; Sihra et al., 1992 ; Neher,
1998 ). This was expected, because exocytosis is dependent on high
localized concentrations of
[Ca2+]i binding to
a low-affinity Ca2+ sensor (Brose et al.,
1992 ; Heidelberger et al., 1994 ). The KCl- and 4-AP-evoked
[Ca2+]i increase
localized to the active zone is probably much larger than that detected
here, because fura-2 only measures the average [Ca2+]i in the
nerve terminal (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985 ) and not the microdomain of
high [Ca2+]i at
the pore of the VDCCs.

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Figure 2.
VDCC-mediated Ca2+ influx
stimulates exocytosis and inhibits endocytosis more efficiently than a
uniform [Ca2+]i increase.
A, Ca2+-dependent glutamate release
after 2 min evoked by KCl (squares), 4-AP
(circles), or ionomycin (IONO;
triangles) is plotted against the stimulated
[Ca2+]i increase for each agent
measured using fura-2. [Ca2+]i was
sampled after 20 sec stimulation. For all experiments,
n = 3-7 (±SEM). B, Retrieval
efficiency for increasing concentrations of KCl
(squares), 4-AP (circles), or ionomycin
(triangles) is plotted against evoked
[Ca2+]i increases for each agent. For
all experiments, n = 3-7 (±SEM). In both
A and B, error bars are smaller than the
symbols.
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When retrieval efficiency was correlated with evoked
[Ca2+]i increases,
a relative decrease in endocytosis was observed with increasing
[Ca2+]i
concentrations for KCl, 4-AP, and ionomycin stimulation (Fig. 2B). The result is the opposite of the
Ca2+-dependence of exocytosis (Fig.
2A) and suggests that higher levels of
Ca2+ inhibit endocytosis (Von Gersdorff
and Matthews, 1994 ). VDCC-mediated Ca2+
influx was more efficient in inhibiting endocytosis than a global increase in
[Ca2+]i. This is
because much lower
[Ca2+]i increases
evoked by KCl or 4-AP were required to inhibit endocytosis than
ionomycin (Fig. 2B). These results reveal a
Ca2+-mediated inhibition of endocytosis
occurring with larger stimuli and suggests that the inhibition may be
mediated by Ca2+ entry through VDCCs and
the resultant high localized
[Ca2+]i at the
active zone. The brief depolarizations evoked by 4-AP were
approximately as efficient at inhibiting endocytosis as the more
prolonged depolarization evoked by KCl.
VDCC-mediated Ca2+ entry
inhibits endocytosis
To examine whether Ca2+ entry through
VDCCs inhibits synaptic vesicle retrieval, we examined the effect of
specific VDCC antagonists on KCl-evoked endocytosis. At most central
synapses, N-, P-, and Q-type VDCCs are coupled to exocytosis (Dunlap et
al., 1995 ). These channels can be inhibited specifically by the peptide
toxins -conotoxin-GVIA (N-type), -agatoxin-IVA (P-type), and
-conotoxin-MVIIC (N/P/Q-type), respectively (McCleskey et al., 1987 ;
Hillyard et al., 1992 ; Mintz et al., 1992 ). KCl-evoked
Ca2+-dependent glutamate release was
substantially blocked by -agatoxin-IVA (30 nM) and
-conotoxin-MVIIC (5 µM), but -conotoxin-GVIA (1 µM) was not as effective (Fig.
3A). All three VDCC
antagonists blocked KCl-evoked
[Ca2+]i increases
to a similar extent (data not shown), suggesting that P- and Q-type
VDCCs predominate at the active zone in our system. KCl-evoked
endocytosis was apparently unaffected by any of the antagonists when
FM2-10 fluorescence was examined, with the exception of
-agatoxin-IVA, which increased endocytosis (Fig. 3B).
Retrieval efficiency was also greatly increased by -agatoxin-IVA and
-conotoxin-MVIIC (Fig. 3C). Therefore,
Ca2+ influx through those VDCCs that are
coupled to transmitter release at the active zone (P/Q-type) also
inhibits endocytosis. This suggests that KCl-induced inhibition of
endocytosis occurs primarily at the active zone in which
Ca2+ channels are clustered rather than
nonactive zones. This also indicates that endocytosis is not always
strictly coupled to exocytosis, because the amount of endocytosis was
unaffected by a reduction in exocytosis and
Ca2+ influx.

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Figure 3.
Activation of VDCCs coupled to exocytosis also
inhibits endocytosis. A,
Ca2+-dependent glutamate release evoked by 30 mM KCl in the presence of 1 µM
-conotoxin-GVIA (N), 30 nM
-agatoxin-IVA (P), or 5 µM
-conotoxin-MVIIC (NPQ); n = 4 (±SEM). B, Nerve terminals were loaded for 2 min with
FM2-10 during S1 stimulation using KCl (30 mM) in the
presence of N-, P-, or N/P/Q-type VDCC blockers. A representative
trace of the subsequent
Ca2+-dependent release of loaded FM2-10 (S2) by a
standard stimulus of 30 mM KCl is displayed. Exocytosis is
constant during S2 stimulation; therefore, endocytosis is calculated as
Ca2+-dependent fluorescence decrease in the S2
stimulation; n = 3-4. In all experiments, VDCC
antagonists were present 2 min before stimulation. KCl stimulation is
represented by the bar. C, KCl-stimulated
retrieval efficiency in the presence of VDCC antagonists normalized to
control [n = 4 (±SEM)].
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Next, we determined whether the inhibition of endocytosis at the active
zone by P/Q-type VDCCs requires
[Ca2+]i
microdomains that are both localized and of high concentration, such as
required for exocytosis (Adler et al., 1991 ; Heidelberger et al.,
1994 ). The effects of the membrane-permeable intracellular Ca2+ chelators EGTA-AM and BAPTA-AM were
compared. These chelators share a similar
Kd for
Ca2+, but BAPTA-AM can bind
Ca2+ with much faster kinetics (Adler et
al., 1991 ) and is thus able to block localized
Ca2+ responses in most nerve terminals
with relative specificity. BAPTA-AM loading of nerve terminals
inhibited KCl-stimulated glutamate release in a concentration-dependent
manner (Fig. 4A), and
EGTA-AM had a smaller effect (Fig. 4C). Presumably,
intracellular BAPTA can better compete for
Ca2+ with the low-affinity
Ca2+ receptor for exocytosis because of
its faster binding kinetics compared with EGTA (Adler et al., 1991 ;
Nichols and Suplick, 1996 ). BAPTA-AM loading did not block KCl-evoked
endocytosis as effectively as exocytosis (Fig. 4B),
and EGTA-AM again had little effect (Fig. 4D). When
retrieval efficiency was calculated for BAPTA-AM-loaded nerve
terminals, relative endocytosis was increased in a
concentration-dependent manner, whereas EGTA-AM-loaded terminals were
unaffected (Fig. 4E). The lack of effect of EGTA-AM
at any concentration illustrates that some agents that affect
exocytosis have a parallel effect on endocytosis. This emphasizes the
importance of retrieval efficiency as a more quantitative index of
endocytosis. These results demonstrate that, by rapidly chelating
Ca2+ entering via VDCCs, the inhibition of
endocytosis by high
[Ca2+]i can be
relieved. This provides evidence for the existence of a relatively
low-affinity Ca2+-binding receptor that
blocks endocytosis and that resides in close proximity to the VDCCs at
the active zone. Additionally, the relative increase in endocytosis
observed with BAPTA-AM-loaded nerve terminals reflects an uncoupling of
exocytosis and endocytosis.

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Figure 4.
Fast chelation of VDCC-mediated
Ca2+ influx increases endocytosis. A,
C, Ca2+-dependent glutamate release
from nerve terminals evoked by 30 mM KCl after previous
loading with increasing concentrations of either BAPTA-AM or EGTA-AM;
n = 4-5 (±SEM). B,
D, Nerve terminals were loaded for 2 min with FM2-10
during S1 stimulation with KCl (30 mM) after previous
loading with increasing concentrations of either BAPTA-AM or EGTA-AM in
either plus or minus Ca2+ medium. A representative
trace of the subsequent
Ca2+-dependent release of loaded FM2-10 (S2) by a
standard stimulus of 30 mM KCl is displayed. In all
experiments, either BAPTA-AM or EGTA-AM were preincubated with the
synaptosomes for 30 min before stimulation. KCl stimulation is
represented by the bar; n = 4. E, KCl-stimulated retrieval efficiency in BAPTA-AM-
(triangles) and EGTA-AM- (squares) loaded
synaptosomes. Exocytosis was constant during S2 stimulation for
EGTA-AM-loaded synaptosomes but was greatly reduced for BAPTA-AM-loaded
synaptosomes (data not shown). Therefore, retrieval efficiency is an
underestimate with respect to BAPTA-AM-loaded synaptosomes. For all
experiments, n = 3-4 (±SEM). Error bars are
smaller than the symbols.
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Ca2+ blocks dynamin I vesiculation
of phospholipid
By blocking entry of extracellular
Ca2+ and by chelating intracellular
Ca2+, our results show that VDCC-mediated,
localized Ca2+ microdomains inhibit
endocytosis at the active zone in nerve terminals via a proposed
low-affinity receptor for Ca2+. To
determine the identity of this proposed receptor, we examined the
presynaptic GTPase dynamin I, which can bind
Ca2+ with low affinity (Liu et al., 1996 ).
High concentrations of free Ca2+ inhibit
dynamin I (Liu et al., 1996 ), whose GTPase activity is essential for
the fission of a synaptic vesicle from the plasma membrane in the final
stages of endocytosis (Takei et al., 1995 ; Stowell et al., 1999 ). We
therefore investigated whether dynamin I may be the proposed
low-affinity receptor for Ca2+. To
directly test whether high
[Ca2+]i inhibits
endocytosis via an interaction with dynamin I, we used an in
vitro assay of dynamin-mediated endocytosis (Sweitzer and Hinshaw,
1998 ). In this assay, purified dynamin I is incubated with large
phosphatidylserine liposomes, which dynamin I can vesiculate upon
addition of GTP. Dynamin-dependent production of vesicles is monitored
as a decrease in light scattering upon addition of 1 mM GTP (Fig.
5A). Vesicle production is
dependent on GTP hydrolysis because a nonhydrolyzable analog of GTP (1 mM GTP- S) was without effect (Fig.
5A). Free Ca2+ decreased
dynamin-dependent vesiculation in a concentration-dependent manner
(IC50 of 21 µM) (Fig.
5B). These Ca2+ concentrations
are well below those observed at the active zone during stimulation of
exocytosis (~200 µM) (Heidelberger et al., 1994 ; Neher, 1998 ). Therefore the inhibition of endocytosis by VDCC-mediated Ca2+ microdomains in nerve
terminals correlates with a low-affinity inhibition of dynamin I by
Ca2+.

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Figure 5.
Ca2+ inhibition of phospholipid
vesiculation by dynamin I. A, Purified dynamin I and
phosphatidylserine liposomes were incubated for 1 hr to allow dynamin
assembly into helices around the liposomes. Addition of 1 mM GTP (bar), but not 1 mM
GTP- S, produced a decrease in light scattering corresponding to
production of small vesicles from long tubule assemblies. Free
Ca2+ was added 2 min before GTP addition.
B, Inhibition of lipid vesiculation by
Ca2+ is shown as a percentage of control
[n = 4 (±SEM)].
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Ca2+ blocks dynamin II GTPase activity and
receptor-mediated endocytosis
To determine whether Ca2+ can inhibit
other forms of dynamin-dependent endocytosis, we examined
receptor-mediated endocytosis, which is mediated by the ubiquitously
expressed dynamin II. High concentrations of free
Ca2+ blocked the GTPase activity of
dynamin II (IC50 of 150 µM) (Fig. 6A). We examined the
effect of increased
[Ca2+]i on
receptor-mediated endocytosis by observing uptake of fluorescently conjugated transferrin into HeLa cells (van der Bliek et al., 1993 ).
Addition of 2 µM ionomycin severely reduced
transferrin uptake into HeLa cells (Fig.
6B,C). Thus, the same concentration of ionomycin that blocked endocytosis in nerve terminals also inhibited
receptor-mediated endocytosis in non-neuronal cells. Ionomycin
increased [Ca2+]i
and blocked transferrin internalization in a concentration-dependent manner (data not shown). The inhibition by ionomycin was not caused by
cell damage because it could be reversed upon washout of the ionophore
(data not shown). Therefore, the inhibition of GTPase activity by
low-affinity Ca2+ binding is a property of
both dynamins, and this inhibition can block both dynamin I- and
II-dependent endocytosis.

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Figure 6.
Ca2+ inhibition of dynamin II
GTPase activity and transferrin endocytosis. A, Purified
recombinant dynamin II and phosphatidylserine liposomes were incubated
for 1 hr. Increasing concentrations of free Ca2+
were added as indicated, and the hydrolysis reaction was stimulated by
the addition of substrate, [ -32P]GTP.
[ -32P]GTP hydrolysis is shown as a percentage of
control [n = 6 (±SEM)]. B,
C, Images display the uptake of Texas Red-conjugated
transferrin into cultured HeLa cells in either the absence
(B) or presence (C) of 2 µM ionomycin. HeLa cells were incubated with transferrin
with or without ionomycin for 10 min before fixing.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
VDCC-mediated Ca2+ influx inhibits endocytosis
in nerve terminal active zones
Because synaptic vesicle retrieval in nerve terminals is triggered
by Ca2+ influx, we aimed to determine
whether the route of Ca2+ entry was
important for endocytosis, because it is critical for exocytosis. In
this study, we demonstrate that VDCC-mediated, localized increases in
[Ca2+]i do not
specifically stimulate endocytosis but inhibit endocytosis at the
active zone in nerve terminals, probably by a low-affinity inhibition
of dynamin I. Therefore, the Ca2+
inhibition of endocytosis shares similar properties to
Ca2+-triggered exocytosis in that the
route of Ca2+ entry and the generation of
Ca2+ microdomains in nerve terminals are
essential for their function.
Endocytosis must be monitored in parallel with exocytosis in nerve
terminals, because the extent of endocytosis is dependent on the number
of fused synaptic vesicles produced by exocytosis (Murthy and Stevens,
1998 ). Therefore, the retrieval efficiency index was used to provide a
better estimate of endocytosis by taking into account the variable
amounts of exocytosis evoked by different stimulation methods. Although
retrieval efficiency provides a value for the relative proportion of
endocytosis to exocytosis, it does not provide information on the
absolute number of synaptic vesicles released and retrieved. It
therefore cannot discount the possibility that endocytosis may be
increased at lower
[Ca2+]i levels
rather than endocytosis being inhibited at high
[Ca2+]i (Marks and
McMahon, 1998 ). We resolved this question by showing that high
[Ca2+]i inhibits
receptor-mediated endocytosis in HeLa cells. This demonstrated that
[Ca2+]i can
inhibit endocytosis in a cell in which endocytosis is not dependent on
previous exocytosis. One known mechanism by which endocytosis can
increase is a process called "excess retrieval" in neuroendocrine
cells (Engisch and Nowycky, 1998 ). This occurs when more surface
membrane is retrieved from the plasma membrane than was originally
incorporated by exocytosis. However, excess retrieval requires higher
[Ca2+]i levels
than exocytosis for stimulation (Engisch and Nowycky, 1998 ), which is
the opposite of our results in nerve terminals.
An alternative explanation for our data is that mild stimulation
preferentially labels the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles,
resulting in greater dye release with the second stimulation. If this
were true, during strong stimulation, FM2-10-labeled synaptic vesicles
should be sequestered into a reserve pool after endocytosis, rendering
vesicles inaccessible for immediate re-release, giving the impression
of an inhibition. However, imaging of single FM2-10-labeled synaptosomes revealed that all accumulated dye was fully released after
loading and unloading with 30 mM KCl (Marks and McMahon, 1998 ). Also, no decrease in the amount of glutamate release was detected during the S2 stimulation in the present study, indicating that exocytosis is unaffected.
Recent studies in cultured neurons and chromaffin cells have proposed
that increased extracellular Ca2+ either
during or without stimulation causes a transition to a rapid form of
synaptic vesicle recycling called "kiss-and-run" (Klingauf et al.,
1998 ; Alés et al., 1999 ). In cultured hippocampal neurons,
FM2-10-loaded nerve terminals released less dye when stimulated in the
presence of elevated extracellular Ca2+
(Klingauf et al., 1998 ). This was interpreted as a
Ca2+-stimulated transition to kiss-and-run
because the vesicle was retrieved from the plasma membrane before it
could empty all of its dye content. A transition to kiss-and-run
recycling could also explain the reduced uptake of FM2-10 we observe
upon VDCC activation, because this would allow less time for FM2-10 to
become incorporated inside retrieving synaptic vesicles. However, we found that glutamate and FM2-10 release increased linearly with increasing concentrations on KCl. This indicates that KCl-evoked increases in
[Ca2+]i do not
cause a transition to kiss-and-run in isolated nerve terminals (our
unpublished observations). This agrees with previous studies
using nerve terminals, which show a linear relationship between FM1-43
release and stimulus intensity (Meffert et al., 1994 ). Therefore, the
decrease in FM2-10 uptake during VDCC activation in our study is
caused by an inhibition of endocytosis rather than by a transition to
kiss-and-run.
Dual roles for Ca2+ in endocytosis
Ca2+ also stimulates synaptic vesicle
endocytosis. Ca2+-dependent stimulation is
mediated by a high-affinity Ca2+
interaction with a calmodulin-calcineurin dephosphorylation pathway (Artalejo et al., 1996 ; Marks and McMahon, 1998 ; Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ). This stimulatory pathway is distinct from the low-affinity inhibitory pathway, because antagonism of the low-affinity inhibitory pathway does not inhibit endocytosis (Figs. 3B,
4B). This is because sufficient
[Ca2+]i is still
present to fully stimulate calmodulin-calcineurin and endocytosis.
Because calmodulin-calcineurin has a high affinity for
Ca2+, endocytosis will always be maximally
activated upon nerve terminal stimulation. This has led to previous
studies in central neurons and neuromuscular preparations concluding
that endocytosis was a Ca2+-independent
process (Ryan et al., 1996 ; Wu and Betz, 1996 ).
Ca2+ blocks dynamin GTPase and
dynamin-dependent endocytosis
The GTPase activity of dynamin I, which is expressed primarily in
neurons, is inhibited in vitro by relatively high
concentrations of Ca2+
(IC50 of 30 µM) (Liu et
al., 1996 ). The vesiculation assay further reveals that essentially the
same concentration of Ca2+ also inhibits
the ability of dynamin I to produce vesicles from phospholipid
(IC50 of 21 µM). These
IC50 values are well within the range of
[Ca2+]i proposed
to be present at the active zone during stimulation (Heidelberger et
al., 1994 ). This strongly suggests, but does not prove, that micromolar
[Ca2+]i in
microdomains at the active zone would inhibit endocytosis locally in
neurons by blocking the GTPase activity of dynamin I. This is supported
by the observation that point mutations of dynamin in the GTP-binding
domain in the temperature-sensitive Drosophila mutant
shibire and mammalian cells overexpressing dominant negative
mutant dynamin with deficient GTPase activity exhibit a block of
endocytosis in vivo (Koenig and Ikeda, 1989 ; van der Bliek
et al., 1993 ). The effect of Ca2+ on
dynamin-dependent endocytosis is not restricted to neurons because the
GTPase activity of the ubiquitously expressed dynamin II and the form
of endocytosis it controls are also inhibited by high
[Ca2+]i.
High [Ca2+]i at active zones
shunts endocytosis to nonactive zones
The number of sites available for synaptic vesicle docking and
fusion is severely limited at the active zone (Schikorski and Stevens,
1997 ); therefore, the nerve terminal needs to ensure that these sites
are rapidly cleared of vesicle membrane. A
Ca2+-mediated inhibition of endocytosis
may provide a mechanism for neurons to help clear the active zone of
recycling synaptic vesicles during periods of highly active exocytosis.
The net result of the inhibition will be that endocytosis is
effectively "shunted" from active to nonactive zones in which it is
still able to proceed because of the high-affinity stimulatory pathway
(Cousin and Robinson, 1998 ; Marks and McMahon, 1998 ) (Fig.
7).
Ca2+-dependent shunting would therefore
allow the active zone to be reserved more exclusively for exocytosis
during intense stimulation. In our model, shunting of endocytosis is
not an active process but would result from the size of the
Ca2+ microdomains generated by the active
zone VDCCs (Neher, 1998 ). Once stimulation is terminated,
[Ca2+]i will
decrease, and endocytosis should occur at both active and nonactive
zone regions as demonstrated in Drosophila nerve terminals
(Koenig and Ikeda, 1996 ).

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Figure 7.
Model for the control of endocytosis by VDCCs in
nerve terminals. Upon VDCC activation, exocytosis is stimulated and
endocytosis is blocked by high localized
[Ca2+]i concentrations at the active
zone. Vesicle membrane can be retrieved once it clears the active zone,
because the block of endocytosis is relieved and endocytosis is
stimulated by lower [Ca2+]i levels in
the nonactive zone. Once stimulation is terminated and
[Ca2+]i decreases, endocytosis can
occur from either location within the nerve terminal.
|
|
Ca2+-dependent shunting of endocytosis
challenges the concept that exocytosis and endocytosis are always
strictly coupled in central neurons. Under mild stimulation conditions,
exocytosis and endocytosis are closely coupled, because the amount of
FM1-43 uptake equals its release in cultured hippocampal neurons
(Murthy and Stevens, 1998 ). However, in this paper, we have shown that endocytosis can be uncoupled from exocytosis by high
[Ca2+]i.
Therefore, we propose that, during intense stimulation, shunting uncouples exocytosis and endocytosis in time (by delaying the retrieval
of vesicles) and in space (by, in effect, relocating endocytosis to
nonactive zones). Because high
[Ca2+]i shunts
endocytosis to the nonactive zone, it may also play a role in
determining where proposed "hot spots" for endocytosis can occur in
these regions (Koenig and Ikeda, 1996 ; Teng et al., 1999 ).
Shunting of endocytosis by elevated
[Ca2+]i may have a
key role in the short-term regulation of synaptic transmission. During high-frequency stimulation, synaptic transmission is rapidly depressed because of depletion of the readily releasable synaptic vesicle pool
[comprised of vesicles docked or primed for release at the active zone
(Stevens and Wesseling, 1998 )]. This may in part be because of the
time taken for fused vesicle membrane to clear the active zone for
retrieval at the nonactive zone. After high-frequency stimulation and
synaptic depression, the readily releasable vesicle pool is replenished
by new vesicles at much faster rates, which are dependent on stimulated
Ca2+ influx (Stevens and Wesseling, 1998 ;
Wang and Kaczmarek, 1998 ). Ca2+-dependent
shunting of endocytosis may facilitate this process by preventing
endocytosis in congested active zones, allowing unimpeded access for
new incoming vesicles. Refilling rates of the readily releasable pool
after synaptic depression are not reduced upon inhibition of
endocytosis in retinal bipolar neurons (Von Gersdorff and Matthews,
1997 ), supporting the hypothesis that shunting contributes toward the
increased refilling rates. Shunting cannot fully explain this
phenomenon, however, because the increased refilling rate can be
reduced by intracellular EGTA, which does not affect shunting (Stevens
and Wesseling, 1998 ; Wang and Kaczmarek, 1998 ). Thus, shunting may
depress synaptic transmission in the short term but will maintain its
efficiency by allowing a more rapid refilling of release sites by
incoming vesicles. Ca2+-dependent shunting
therefore provides a new modulatory mechanism for the control of
short-term synaptic signaling and regulation of synaptic vesicle traffic.
Ca2+ inhibition of
receptor-mediated endocytosis
The finding that receptor-mediated endocytosis in non-neuronal
cells is inhibited by Ca2+ suggests that
high [Ca2+]i
inhibits all forms of endocytosis mediated by the dynamins and has
wider implications for cell biology. The inhibition is not likely to
play a role in normal receptor-mediated endocytosis, which has no known
Ca2+-dependence, and nonexcitable cells do
not have clustered VDCCs that generate microdomains. However, it may
have consequences for the mechanisms underlying cellular injury and
repair. Upon membrane damage, high localized
[Ca2+]i gradients
are created, and large membranous vesicles are formed in a variety of
cell types, including cut axons (De Mello, 1973 ; Nishiye, 1977 ; Severs
et al., 1990 ; Eddleman et al., 1997 ). The vesicles originate from the
plasma membrane and mediate repair by patching the cell membrane using
the exocytosis protein machinery (Eddleman et al., 1998 ; Togo et al.,
1999 ). In cut giant axons, no vesiculation or membrane repair occurs in
the absence of extracellular Ca2+ but is
reactivated by internal perfusion of the axon with 100 µM
Ca2+ (Eddleman et al., 1998 ). The process
of membrane repair is morphologically analogous to the formation of
large vacuoles in the dynamin-defective Drosophila shibire
mutant (Koenig and Ikeda, 1989 , 1996 ). Our results raise the
possibility that a block of dynamin-dependent membrane vesiculation by
high [Ca2+]i may
contribute to the large membrane structures that are created in cells
to facilitate membrane repair after injury.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 26, 1999; revised Sept. 27, 1999; accepted Nov. 18, 1999.
This research was supported by a grant from the Australian National
Health and Medical Research Council. M.A.C. is supported by a
fellowship from the Human Frontiers of Science Program. We thank Sandra
Schmid for the gift of purified dynamin II and Chandra Malladi for the
purification of dynamin I. We thank John Bekkers, Bruce Walmsley, Max
Bennett, and Peter Rowe for helpful comments.
Correspondence should be addressed to Michael A. Cousin, Cell Signaling
Unit, Children's Medical Research Institute, Locked Bag 23, Wentworthville 2145, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. E-mail:
mcousin{at}cmri.usyd.edu.au.
 |
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A. Quan, A. B. McGeachie, D. J. Keating, E. M. van Dam, J. Rusak, N. Chau, C. S. Malladi, C. Chen, A. McCluskey, M. A. Cousin, et al.
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P. E. MacDonald, L. Eliasson, and P. Rorsman
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M. Girard, P. D. Allaire, P. S. McPherson, and F. Blondeau
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H. Teng and R. S Wilkinson
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J. M. Bekkers
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R. Heidelberger, Z.-Y. Zhou, and G. Matthews
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P. Congar and L.-E. Trudeau
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B. Billups and I. D. Forsythe
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C. Daly and E. B. Ziff
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S.-A. Chan and C. Smith
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G. Neves, A. Gomis, and L. Lagnado
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R. Heidelberger
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A. K Lee and A. Tse
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C. Daly, M. Sugimori, J. E. Moreira, E. B. Ziff, and R. Llinas
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G. Neves, A. Gomis, and L. Lagnado
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