Introduction
The broad and complex functions of neural circuits depend on diverse neuronal subtypes communicating through synapses with distinct properties. Thus, understanding how synaptic diversity is established is critical for understanding neural circuit function. Neurotransmission occurs at specialized membranes called active zones (AZs) where action potentials drive the opening of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (VGCCs) to trigger Ca2+-dependent synaptic vesicle (SV) fusion and neurotransmitter release. Neurotransmitter release properties are determined locally at individual synapses and vary considerably between neuronal subtypes and within homogeneous populations of neurons (Ariel et al., 2012; Atwood and Karunanithi, 2002; Branco and Staras, 2009; Hatt and Smith, 1976). In fact, functional imaging studies in
Presynaptic strength is defined as the likelihood of neurotransmitter release following an action potential (probability of release, Pr). This probabilistic process is determined by the number of functional SV release sites and their individual probability of vesicle release. The probability of SV release is highly dependent on transient increases in intracellular Ca2+ levels at vesicular sensors. Accordingly, SV release sites and VGCCs are key substrates for generating diversity of synaptic function (Akbergenova et al., 2018; Aldahabi et al., 2022; Chen et al., 2015; Fedchyshyn and Wang, 2005; Fekete et al., 2019; Gratz et al., 2019; Holderith et al., 2012; Laghaei et al., 2018; Miki et al., 2017; Nakamura et al., 2015; Newman et al., 2022; Rebola et al., 2019; Reddy-Alla et al., 2017; Sauvola et al., 2021; Sheng et al., 2012). Numerous studies have demonstrated that VGCC abundance is highly correlated with Pr across species (Akbergenova et al., 2018; Gratz et al., 2019; Holderith et al., 2012; Miki et al., 2017; Nakamura et al., 2015; Sheng et al., 2012). Paradoxically, this is not always the case. For example, a recent study investigated two cerebellar synaptic subtypes, one high-Pr formed by inhibitory stellate cells and one low-Pr formed by excitatory granule cells, and found higher VGCC levels at low-Pr granule synapses (Rebola et al., 2019). Since VGCCs in closer proximity to release sites are expected to have a greater impact on vesicular release probability than those positioned farther away, the spatial coupling of VGCCs and SVs at AZs is a critical determinant of Pr (Chen et al., 2015; Eggermann et al., 2011; Fedchyshyn and Wang, 2005; Nakamura et al., 2015; Rebola et al., 2019). Indeed, at high-Pr stellate synapses, a ‘perimeter release’ AZ organization places VGCCs ~40 nm closer to SVs than at low-Pr granular synapses (Rebola et al., 2019). Another recent study investigated two functionally distinct connections formed by CA1 pyramidal cells (Aldahabi et al., 2022). While Ca2+ influx was higher at the high-Pr synapse, raising Ca2+ influx at the low-Pr synapse to match the high-Pr synapse did not equalize Pr.
To further investigate this paradox, we sought a system where we could investigate the relationship between VGCCs and Pr both within and between two closely related neurons that form synapses with distinct release probabilities.
Results
VGCC levels predict Pr within, but not between, inputs
To investigate the relationship between VGCC levels and neurotransmitter release properties at functionally distinct synapses, we took advantage of the two motor neuron subtypes with low and high release probabilities that innervate most
In
Figure 1.
VGCC levels predict Pr within, but not between, inputs.
(A) Representative confocal Z-projection of CacTd-Tomato-N (magenta) with type Ib (blue) and type Is (red) terminals outlined. (B) AZ heat map of terminals in A with color indicating Pr and size representing sum Cac intensity levels in arbitrary units (AU). (C) Average single-AZ probability of release at type Ib and Is terminals. N=6 animals, 6 NMJs. (D) Quintile distribution of single-AZ Pr frequency at type Ib and Is inputs. (E, F) Correlation between normalized CacTd-Tomato-N intensity and Pr at type Is and Ib AZs of the same 6 NMJs. Each dot represents a single AZ and each color corresponds to an individual NMJ with linear regression lines indicated for each. (G) Top, representative confocal Z-projection of CacsfGFP-N. Bottom, CacsfGFP-N in green with HRP marking neuronal membranes in gray. Type Ib (blue) and type Is (red) terminals are outlined. (H) Quantification of CacsfGFP-N AZ intensity at type Ib and Is terminals. Each data point represents the average normalized single AZ sum intensity for an individual NMJ. (I) Distribution of normalized CacsfGFP-N intensity from single type Ib and Is AZs in H (X-axis cutoff at 5.0). (J) Comparison between normalized CacTd-Tomato-N and Pr of type Ib and Is AZs combined from E-F with linear regression lines (blue and red, respectively) and 95% confidence intervals (black lines) indicated. All scale bars = 5 µm, all error bars indicate S.E.M, ****p<0.0001; ns, not significant. N’s, absolute values, and statistical information is detailed in Supplementary file 1a.
Figure 1—figure supplement 1.
Electrophysiological validation of endogenously tagged cacophony lines.
(A-C) Representative traces of EJPs (top) and mEJPs (bottom) in control, cacHaloTag-N, and cacTd-Tomato-N. (D-F) Quantification of EJPs, mEJPs, and quantal content (QC). All error bars indicate S.E.M., ns, not significant.
A simple prediction of the observation that VGCC levels correlate highly with Pr at individual AZs of both low- and high-Pr inputs is that Cac levels will be higher at synapses of type Is inputs than type Ib. We analyzed CacsfGFP-N levels at individual type Ib and Is synapses and found that average Cac levels are the same at type Ib and Is AZs (Figure 1G and H). Cac levels are also similarly distributed across AZs of the two inputs (Figure 1I). Together, these findings indicate that the relationship between VGCC levels and Pr differs between the two inputs. Consistently, when we directly compare the best-fit lines for the relationship between Cac levels and Pr at type Ib and Is inputs from our correlative functional imaging data (Figure 1E and F), we find that the slopes are significantly different (Figure 1J). Across type Is AZs, a similar range of VGCC levels supports a higher range of release probabilities. Thus, VGCCs can predict Pr within synaptic subtypes, but not between AZs of different synaptic subtypes, providing a framework for understanding seemingly contradictory findings on the role of VGCCs in determining Pr.
VGCC clusters are more compact at AZs of high-Pr type Is inputs
Many differences between low-Pr type Ib and high-Pr type Is AZs have been described (Aponte-Santiago and Littleton, 2020; Aponte-Santiago et al., 2020; Atwood et al., 1993; He et al., 2023; Jetti et al., 2023; Kurdyak et al., 1994; Lu et al., 2016; Medeiros and O’Connor-Giles, 2023). Perhaps most notably, type Is AZs experience ~twofold greater Ca2+ influx than type Ib (He et al., 2023; Lu et al., 2016). While this alone could explain the estimated 3-fold greater Pr at type Is AZs and is certainly a key factor, several lines of evidence argue for additional contributors. A recent study using a botulinum transgene to isolate type Ib and Is synapses for electrophysiological analysis found that increasing external [Ca2+] from physiological levels (1.8 mM) to 3 mM or even 6 mM does not result in a 3-fold increase in EPSCs or quantal content at type Ib synapses and type Ib synapses continue to facilitate at 3 mM external [Ca2+] (He et al., 2023). Using this approach, they further found that type Ib synapses are more sensitive to the slow Ca2+ chelator EGTA, indicating looser VGCC-SV coupling.
We investigated the spatial distribution of VGCCs at type Ib and Is AZs using 3D dSTORM single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM). An individual VGCC complex is estimated to be ~10 nm in diameter with the most common immunolabeling techniques adding significantly to their size and creating a linkage error of ~20 nm between the target molecule and fluorescent reporter (Früh et al., 2021; Liu et al., 2022; Thomas, 2000). For following VGCC dynamics using single-particle tracking via photoactivation localization microscopy (sptPALM), we recently incorporated mEOS4b (Paez-Segala et al., 2015) at the same N-terminal site we previously used to endogenously tag Cac, achieving a linkage error of less of than 5 nm (Ghelani et al., 2023; Gratz et al., 2019). To gain more flexibility in labeling Cac without adding to the linkage error, we swapped the mEOS tag for a similarly sized HaloTag (
Figure 2.
VGCC clusters are more compact at AZs of high-Pr type Is inputs.
(A–C) Representative SoRa Z-projection of CacHaloTag-N (green), Brp (magenta), and merge. (D, E) Representative boutons of STORM CacHaloTag-N clusters as identified by DBSCAN at type Ib and Is boutons as indicated. Each color represents an individual identified cluster with purple scattered dots identifying excluded background signal. (F–H) Analysis of STORM-acquired CacHaloTag-N clusters where each data point represents the respective single-cluster measurement averaged over individual boutons. (F) Quantification of CacHaloTag-N cluster area at type Ib and Is AZs. (G) Quantification of localizations per cluster at type Ib and Is boutons. (H) Calculated CacHaloTag-N cluster density at type Ib and Is AZs. (I) Paired analysis of calculated AZ cluster density averaged over individual type Ib and Is inputs to the same muscle. All scale bars = 1 µm, all error bars indicate S.E.M. **p<0.01; *p<0.05; ns, not significant. N’s, absolute values, and statistical information is detailed in Supplementary file 1a.
Differences in Bruchpilot levels and function at low- and high-Pr inputs
To understand how these nanoscale differences in VGCC organization might be established, we investigated the AZ scaffolding protein Brp. Brp/CAST/ELKS family proteins function as central organizers of both VGCCs and SV release sites at developing synapses (Dai et al., 2006; Dong et al., 2018; Hallermann et al., 2010; Held et al., 2016; Kittel et al., 2006; Liu et al., 2014; McDonald et al., 2020; Radulovic et al., 2020). Like Cac, Brp is more densely arranged at type Is AZs as measured through SMLM and stimulated emission depletion (STED) imaging studies (He et al., 2023; Jetti et al., 2023; Mrestani et al., 2021). We simultaneously imaged type Ib and Is inputs and found lower Brp levels at type Is AZs (Figure 3A and B). Since Cac levels are similar at AZs of the two inputs, lower Brp levels result in a significantly higher Cac:Brp ratio at type Is synapses, which we hypothesize promotes compact organization of VGCCs (Figure 3C). In contrast, we and others have previously shown that Brp levels positively correlate with Pr among AZs of low-Pr type Ib inputs (Gratz et al., 2019; Muhammad et al., 2015; Newman et al., 2017; Peled et al., 2014; Reddy-Alla et al., 2017). Consistently, Brp and Cac levels strongly correlate at type Ib AZs (Gratz et al., 2019) and we observe a similarly strong correlation across individual type Is AZs (Figure 3D). Thus, like VGCCs, Brp levels contribute in distinct ways to synaptic heterogeneity within vs. between low- and high-Pr inputs, likely due to differences in AZ organization between the two synaptic subtypes.
Figure 3.
Differences in Bruchpilot (Brp) levels and function at low-and high-Pr inputs.
(A) Representative confocal Z-projection of Brp expression at type Ib (blue outline) and type Is (red outline) terminals. (B) Quantification of Brp AZ intensity at type Ib and Is terminals. (C) Ratio of normalized CacsfGFP-N:Brp levels at type Ib and Is inputs to the same muscles. (D) Correlation of CacsfGFP-N and Brp at type Ib and Is single AZs with linear regression lines (blue and red, respectively) and 95% confidence intervals (black dotted lines) indicated. (E, F) Representative confocal Z-projections of CacsfGFP-N (green), Brp (magenta), HRP (white), and merge at type Ib (blue outline) and Is (red outline) terminals of
We next investigated the requirement for Brp in promoting VGCC accumulation at low- and high-Pr inputs by analyzing CacsfGFP-N levels in
Brp differentially regulates VGCC dynamics at low- and high-Pr synapses during presynaptic homeostatic potentiation
In response to acute or chronic inhibition of glutamate receptors at NMJs,
Figure 4.
Brp differentially regulates VGCC dynamics at low-and high-Pr inputs during
(A, B) Representative confocal Z-projections of CacsfGFP-N (top, green), Brp (middle, magenta), and both merged with HRP (bottom, gray) at untreated and PhTx-treated
At low-Pr type Ib AZs, Brp is a critical regulator of PHP-induced accumulation of proteins associated with SV priming and release, specifically Unc13A and Syntaxin-1A (Böhme et al., 2019). At type Ib AZs, PhTx also induces a Brp-dependent increase in Cac density and decrease in channel mobility (Ghelani et al., 2023). Notably, Brp itself becomes more densely organized during PHP (Ghelani et al., 2023), consistent with its denser organization at high-Pr type Is AZs (Mrestani et al., 2021). Since baseline accumulation of VGCCs depends less on Brp at high-Pr type Is AZs, we investigated the role of Brp in promoting dynamic increases in VGCC levels at type Ib and Is AZs by treating
Endogenous tagging of VGCC auxiliary subunits reveals distinct synaptic expression patterns
In addition to the pore-forming α subunits, VGCCs comprise auxiliary α2δ and β subunits that regulate forward channel trafficking, membrane insertion, and function (Figure 5A; Campiglio and Flucher, 2015; Dolphin and Lee, 2020; Weiss and Zamponi, 2017). β subunits interact with pore-forming α subunits intracellularly, whereas GPI-anchored α2δ subunits are largely extracellular. Beyond their interaction with α subunits, α2δs have been shown to interact with a growing number of extracellular proteins to promote synaptogenesis (Bauer et al., 2010; Dolphin, 2018; Risher et al., 2018). The
Figure 5.
Endogenous tagging of VGCC auxiliary subunits reveals distinct synaptic expression patterns.
(A) Schematic of a Ca2+ channel complex with tagged auxiliary subunits (created with BioRender). (B) Schematic of Ca-β (isoform PL shown), Stj (isoform PC), and Stolid (isoform H/I) indicating endogenous tag locations. (C–E) Quantification of EJPs, mEJPs, and quantal content for each endogenously tagged line. (F–H) Representative confocal Z-projections of auxiliary subunit expression (green) at the larval ventral ganglion (VG, top, scale bars = 100 µm) and NMJs co-labeled with anti-HRP (magenta, bottom, scale bars = 5 µm). All error bars indicate S.E.M., ns, not significant. N’s, absolute values, and statistical information is detailed in Supplementary file 1a.
To explore potential differences in VGCC subunit composition at type Ib and Is synapses, we used CRISPR gene editing to incorporate endogenous V5 tags in sequence common to all isoforms of
Figure 6.
Stj/α2δ–3 levels are lower at AZs of high-Pr type Is inputs.
(A) Representative SoRa Z-projections of Ca-βV5-C (green), Brp (magenta), and merge at a single bouton. (B) Representative SoRa Z-projections of CacsfGFP-N (green), StjV5-N (magenta), and merge at a single bouton. Scale bars for A and B=1 μm. (C, D) Representative confocal Z-projections of Ca-βV5-C expression and StjV5-N expression at type Ib (blue outline) and type Is (red outline) terminals. Scale bars = 5 μm. (E, F) Quantification of Ca-βV5-C and StjV5-N fluorescence intensity at type Ib and Is AZs. Each data point represents the average normalized single AZ sum intensity for an individual NMJ. (G, H) Correlation of CacsfGFP-N and StjV5-N fluorescence intensity levels at type Ib and Is single AZs with linear regression lines (blue or red line, respectively) and 95% confidence intervals (black lines). All error bars indicate S.E.M. ***p<0.001; ns, not significant. N’s, absolute values, and statistical information is detailed in Supplementary file 1a.
Stj/α2δ-3 levels are lower at AZs of high-Pr type Is inputs
To investigate Ca-βV5-C and StjV5-N localization at type Ib and Is AZs, we used super-resolution optical reassignment microscopy. Both subunits localize to AZs labeled with Cac or the CAST/ELKS AZ cytomatrix protein Brp (Figure 6A and B). We observe Brp rings surrounding puncta of VGCCs including Ca-βV5-C (Figure 6A). The tight localization of both subunits to central AZ puncta suggests they are associated with α subunits and predicts that Ca-βV5-C and StjV5-N levels, like Cac, will be similar at the low- and high-Pr synapses. To test this, we imaged Ca-βV5-C and StjV5-N levels at both inputs simultaneously using confocal microscopy and measured fluorescence intensity (Figure 6C and D). As predicted, we found that Ca-βV5-C levels are similar at type Ib and Is AZs (Figure 6E). In contrast, StjV5-N levels are significantly lower at high-Pr type Is AZs (Figure 6F). Thus, while Cac and Ca-β are present in similar ratios at AZs of both inputs, surprisingly, the same is not true of Stj/α2δ–3 with high-Pr type Is AZs exhibiting lower levels of Stj. This unexpected finding indicates that α:α2δ–3 stoichiometry is not always 1:1 in vivo and differs at low- and high-Pr synapses. This is consistent with studies of mammalian subunits indicating that in contrast to β subunits, α2δ interactions with α subunits may be transient, leading to a pool of VGCCs lacking α2δ (Müller et al., 2010; Voigt et al., 2016). Our results indicate this pool may be present in vivo and larger at high-Pr type Is inputs.
To further investigate the contribution of Stj to synaptic heterogeneity, we analyzed the relationship between Cac and Stj levels at individual AZs of type Is inputs. StjV5-N and CacsfGFP-N levels are highly positively correlated at type Is AZs (Figure 6G). We observe the same relationship between StjV5-N and CacsfGFP-N levels at type Ib AZs (Figure 6H). Because Pr is highly positively correlated with Cac levels within synaptic subtypes, this indicates that Stj levels are also positively correlated with Pr within, but not between, inputs.
Stj/α2δ–3 levels are modulated at AZs of both low- and high-Pr inputs during presynaptic homeostatic potentiation
α2δ subunits are critical regulators of α subunit forward trafficking. In flies and mammals, overexpression of α2δ subunits increases α subunit abundance, whereas overexpression of the α subunit alone does not (Cao et al., 2004; Cunningham et al., 2022; Hoppa et al., 2012). These findings suggest that α2δ may be dynamically regulated together with Cac during PHP, a prediction we can now test with our endogenously tagged line. Following PhTx exposure, we find that StjV5-N is recruited on a rapid timescale to both low- and high-Pr AZs, increasing by a similar percentage at both type Ib and Is AZs (27% and 26%, respectively) as predicted (Figure 7A-C). Cac levels are similarly increased (33% at type Ib and 30% at type Is; See Figure 4D), suggesting coordinated regulation. We have previously shown that Cac abundance is also increased in chronic PHP, which is induced by genetic loss of the GluRIIA receptor subunit (Gratz et al., 2019; Li et al., 2018; Petersen et al., 1997). We investigated Stj dynamics in
Figure 7.
Stj/α2δ–3 levels are modulated at AZs of both low- and high-Pr inputs during presynaptic homeostatic potentiation.
(A, B) Representative confocal Z-projections of StjV5-N (top, green), HRP (middle, gray), and merge (bottom) at untreated and PhTx-treated
Discussion
Complex nervous system function depends on communication at synapses with heterogeneous and plastic properties. Paradoxical findings in the field have raised questions about the role of VGCCs in establishing neurotransmitter release properties. Our findings suggest a model in which two broad intersecting mechanisms contribute to synaptic diversity in the nervous system: (1) nanoscale spatial organization and relative molecular content establish distinct average basal release probabilities that differ between inputs and (2) coordinated modulation of VGCC and active zone protein abundance independently tunes Pr among individual synapses of distinct inputs. This model provides a framework for integrating diverse findings in the field and understanding how multiple levels of molecular and organizational diversity can intersect to generate extensive synaptic heterogeneity. Investigations at diverse synapses using approaches ranging from cell-attached patch recordings to freeze-fracture immuno-electron microscopy to correlative functional imaging have revealed a strong positive correlation between VGCC number and Pr (Akbergenova et al., 2018; Gratz et al., 2019; Holderith et al., 2012; Miki et al., 2017; Nakamura et al., 2015; Newman et al., 2022; Sheng et al., 2012). This holds true among mature synapses in the hippocampus or immature synapses of the calyx of Held (Holderith et al., 2012; Sheng et al., 2012) and at the developing
The separability of VGCC abundance, Ca2+ influx, and Pr appears to be due to molecular and spatial differences between synaptic subtypes. In CA1 pyramidal neurons, differences in Munc-13-dependent SV priming are proposed to establish synapse-specific release properties, possibly due to the presence of distinct isoforms at low- vs. high-Pr connections. In the cerebellum, fewer VGCC are more tightly coupled to SVs at high-Pr stellate synapses (Rebola et al., 2019). More densely organized VGCCs at the mature vs. developing calyx of Held also exhibit greater coupling with SVs (Chen et al., 2015; Fedchyshyn and Wang, 2005; Fekete et al., 2019; Nakamura et al., 2015; Sheng et al., 2012). We find that Cac clusters are denser at high-Pr AZs formed by
We also observe molecular differences between
How might a higher α:α2δ–3 ratio result in higher Pr? One possibility involves α2δ–3 interactions with cell adhesion molecules. In mammals, α-Neurexin specifically inhibits Ca2+ currents in Cav2.2 channels containing α2δ–3 (Tong et al., 2017), which, if similar at the
Materials and methods
The following fly lines used in this study were obtained from the Bloomington
Immunostaining
All antibodies used, associated fixation methods, and incubation times can be found in Supplementary file 1b. Male wandering third-instar larvae were dissected in ice-cold saline and fixed either for 6 min at room temperature with Bouin’s fixative, 5 min on ice with 100% methanol, or 30 min at room temperature (RT) in 4% PFA. Dissections were permeabilized with PTX (PBS with 0.1% Triton-X 100) and blocked for 1 hr at RT using 5% goat serum and 1% bovine serum albumin. Stained larvae were mounted in Vectashield (Vector Laboratories, #H-1000) under Fisherbrand coverglass (Fisher Scientific, #12541B) for confocal microscopy, with Prolong glass mounting medium (Thermo Fisher Scientific, #P36980) under Zeiss High Performance Coverglass (Zeiss, #474030-9000-000) for super-resolution optical reassignment microscopy, or buffer (see STORM imaging and analysis section) under Zeiss coverglass with edges sealed using vacuum grease for STORM microscopy.
Ca2+ imaging and analysis
Functional imaging was performed on a Nikon A1R resonant scanning confocal mounted on a FN1 microscope using a Nikon Apo LWD 25x1.1 NA objective and a Mad City Labs piezo drive nosepiece. Dissections and data collection were performed as previously described in Gratz et al., 2019. Briefly, c
Z-stacks and movies were loaded into Nikon Elements Software (NIS) where movies were motion corrected, background subtracted, and denoised. Change in fluorescence (ΔF) movies were then created by subtracting the average of the previous 10 frames from each frame. A substack of only stimulation frames was further processed using a gaussian filter followed by the Bright Spots detection module in the Nikon GA3 software to identify the location of each postsynaptic event. CacTd-Tomato-N fluorescence intensity levels and coordinate locations were measured for 531 AZs for type Ib and 365 AZs for type Is terminals across six animals. X-Y coordinate positions of fluorescent signals from GCaMP6f postsynaptic events were aligned to CacTd-Tomato-N puncta locations and each post synaptic event assigned to a Cac punctum using nearest neighbor analysis. Postsynaptic events that did not map within 960 nm of a CacTd-Tomato-N punctum were discarded from the analysis. Pearson’s correlation was used to determine the correlation between Pr and Cac levels normalized to average to account for variability between imaging sessions. Cac intensity-Pr heat maps were generated using Python matplotlib and seaborn plotting packages.
STORM imaging and analysis
STORM imaging was performed on a Nikon Eclipse Ti2 3D NSTORM with an Andor iXon Ultra camera, Nikon LUN-F 405/488/640 nm lasers, and a Nikon 100x1.49 NA objective. STORM buffer (10 mM MEA (pH 8.0), 3 U/mL pyranose oxidase, and 90 U/mL catalase, 10% (w/v) glucose, 10 mM sodium chloride, and 50 mM Tris hydrochloride) was made fresh each imaging day and pH adjusted to between 7.0–8.0 using acetic acid.
Confocal imaging and analysis
For quantitative AZ analysis of larval NMJs, dissections stained in the same dish were imaged on a Nikon Eclipse Ni A1
Electrophysiology
Current-clamp recordings were performed as previously described (Bruckner et al., 2017). Male third-instar larvae were dissected in HL3 (70 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 15 mM MgCl2, 10 mM NaHCO3, 115 mM sucrose, 5 mM trehalose, 5 mM HEPES, pH 7.2) with 0.25 mM Ca2+. Recordings were performed in HL3 at the external Ca2+ concentration indicated. Sharp borosilicate electrodes filled with 3 M KCl were used to record from muscle 6 of abdominal segments A3 and A4. Recordings were conducted on a Nikon FN1 microscope using a 40x0.80 NA water-dipping objective and acquired using an Axoclamp 900 A amplifier, Digidata 1550B acquisition system, and pClamp 11.0.3 software (Molecular Devices). For each cell with an initial resting potential between −60 and −80 mV and input resistance ≥5 MΩ, mean miniature excitatory junctional potentials (mEJPs) were collected for 1 min in the absence of stimulation and analyzed using Mini Analysis (Synaptosoft). EJPs were generated by applying a stimulus to severed segmental nerves at a frequency of 0.2 Hz using an isolated pulse stimulator 2100 (A-M Systems). Stimulus amplitude was adjusted to consistently elicit compound responses from both type Ib and Is motor neurons. At least 25 consecutive EJPs were recorded for each cell and analyzed in pClamp to obtain mean amplitude. Quantal content was calculated for each recording as mean EJP amplitude divided by mean mEJP amplitude.
Acute homeostatic challenge
Acute PHP was induced by incubating semi-intact preparations in 20 µM Philanthotoxin-433 (Figure 4: PhTx; Santa Cruz, sc-255421, Lot B1417 and Figure 7: PhTx; Sigma Aldrich, P207-2, Lot MKCK7405) diluted in HL3 containing 0.4 mM Ca2+ for 10 min at room temperature (Frank et al., 2006). Control preparations were given a mock treatment. Following control and experimental treatment, dissections were completed, fixed in 4% PFA for 30 min (
Experimental design and statistical analysis
Statistical analyses were conducted in GraphPad Prism 9. Normality was determined by the D’Agostino–Pearson omnibus test. Comparisons of normally distributed data were conducted by Student’s
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Abstract
Synaptic heterogeneity is a hallmark of nervous systems that enables complex and adaptable communication in neural circuits. To understand circuit function, it is thus critical to determine the factors that contribute to the functional diversity of synapses. We investigated the contributions of voltage-gated calcium channel (VGCC) abundance, spatial organization, and subunit composition to synapse diversity among and between synapses formed by two closely related
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer