Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 8, 1469-1478, Copyright © 1988 by Society for Neuroscience
Autoradiographic localization of voltage-dependent sodium channels on the mouse neuromuscular junction using 125I-alpha scorpion toxin. I. Preferential labeling of glial cells on the presynaptic side
JL Boudier, E Jover and P Cau
Laboratoire de Biologie Cellulaire-Histologie, U.A. CNRS 1179, INSERM U. 172, Faculte de Medecine Nord de Marseille, France.
Alpha-scorpion toxins bind specifically to the voltage-sensitive sodium
channel in excitable membranes, and binding is potential-dependent
(Catterall, 1984). The radioiodinated toxin II from the scorpion
Androctonus australis Hector (alpha ScTx) was used to localize voltage-
sensitive sodium channels on the presynaptic side of mouse neuromuscular
junctions (NMJ) by autoradiography using both light and electron
microscopy. Silver grain localization was analyzed by the cross-fire
method. At the light-microscopic level, grain density over NMJ appeared
6-8x higher than over nonjunctional muscle membrane. The specificity of
labeling was verified by competition/displacement with an excess of native
alpha ScTx. Labeling was also inhibited by incubation in depolarizing
conditions, showing its potential- dependence. At the electron-microscopic
level, analysis showed that voltage-sensitive sodium channels labeled with
alpha ScTx were almost exclusively localized on membranes, as expected. Due
to washout after incubation, appreciable numbers of binding sites were not
found on the postsynaptic membranes. However, on the presynaptic side,
alpha ScTx- labeled voltage-sensitive sodium channels were localized on the
membrane of non-myelin-forming Schwann cells covering NMJ. The axonal
presynaptic membrane was not labeled. These results show that voltage-
sensitive sodium channels are present on glial cells in vivo, as already
demonstrated in vitro (Chiu et al., 1984; Schrager et al., 1985). It is
proposed that these glial channels could be indirectly involved in the
ionic homeostasis of the axonal environment.