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The Journal of Neuroscience, June 15, 2000, 20(12):4414-4422
Probing Fundamental Aspects of Synaptic Transmission with
Strontium
Matthew A.
Xu-Friedman and
Wade G.
Regehr
Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115
Strontium is capable of supporting synaptic transmission, but
release is dramatically different from that evoked in calcium. By
measuring presynaptic strontium levels, we gain insight into the
actions of strontium, which has implications for the identification of
molecules involved in different aspects of synaptic transmission. We
examined presynaptic divalent levels and synaptic release at the
granule cell to stellate cell synapse in mouse cerebellar slices. We
find that the prolonged duration of release and paired-pulse facilitation in the presence of strontium can be accounted for by the
slower removal of strontium from the presynaptic terminal. Phasic and
delayed release are both driven by strontium less effectively than by
calcium, indicating that a heightened sensitivity to strontium is not a
feature of the binding sites involved in facilitation and delayed
release. We also find that the cooperativity for phasic release is 1.7 for strontium compared with 3.2 for calcium, suggesting that
differential binding may help to identify the calcium sensor involved
in phasic release.
Key words:
delayed release; facilitation; phasic release; residual
calcium; cooperativity; calcium sensor
Copyright © 2000 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/00/20124414-09$05.00/0
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