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Membrane synaptic

As noted above, synaptic vesicles are not typically generated at the level of the TGN. Instead, they are assembled from endocytosed material retrieved from the synaptic plasma membrane. Synaptic vesicle and plasma membrane lipids and proteins are synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum and modified in the Golgi apparatus, where they are then packaged in secretory vesicles. These synaptic precursors are delivered to the plasma membrane from the cell body by the constitutive secretory pathway. Synaptic vesicle proteins must be retrieved by clathrin-mediated synaptic vesicle endocytosis, a variant of RME with some neuron-specific components. Once the vesicle sheds its clathrin coat, the uncoated vesicle fuses with a... [Pg.158]

However, an alternative pathway that bypasses clathrin-mediated endocytosis and EEs appears to be available as well. This model of endocytosis known as kiss and run or its variant kiss and stay have attracted increasing interest in recent years [74] (Fig. 9-9B). Kiss and run has been directly demonstrated with dense-core granules in neuroendocrine cells [84, 85], and this model would explain some observations that are not readily accommodated by the classical pathway. The kiss and run model proposes that neurotransmitters are released by a transient fusion pore, rather than by a complete fusion with integration of the synaptic vesicle components into the plasma membrane. Synaptic membrane proteins never lose their association and the vesicle reforms when the pore closes. As a result, the empty vesicle can be refilled and reused without going through clathrin-mediated endocytosis and sorting in the EEs. [Pg.161]

Synaptosomes can be subfractionated into a heavy membrane fraction that contains plasma membranes, synaptic vesicle clusters and most of the contaminating membranes, a light membrane fraction that is enriched in synaptic vesicles and devoid of measurable contamination by mitochondria or neuronal plasma membranes, and a... [Pg.210]

Acetylcholine serves as a neurotransmitter. Removal of acetylcholine within the time limits of the synaptic transmission is accomplished by acetylcholinesterase (AChE). The time required for hydrolysis of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction is less than a millisecond (turnover time is 150 ps) such that one molecule of AChE can hydrolyze 6 105 acetylcholine molecules per minute. The Km of AChE for acetylcholine is approximately 50-100 pM. AChE is one of the most efficient enzymes known. It works at a rate close to catalytic perfection where substrate diffusion becomes rate limiting. AChE is expressed in cholinergic neurons and muscle cells where it is found attached to the outer surface of the cell membrane. [Pg.12]

While the basic features of SNARE assembly and disassembly provide a convenient framework for explaining how membrane fusion works, both the regulation of SNAREs and the molecular details of fusion are not well understood. Most is known about the neuronal SNAREs that mediate regulated membrane fusion of synaptic vesicles and of secretory granules in neuroendocrine cells. They include synaptobrevin2, localized to the synaptic vesicle, and SNAP25 ( SNAPs) and syntaxinlA, both of which are localized to the plasma... [Pg.489]

The M-channels (M for muscarine) are expressed in the peripheral sympathetic neurons and CNS. In the absence of acetylcholine, the M-channel opens at resting membrane potential and dampens neuronal responsiveness to synaptic inputs. Acetylcholine inhibits M-channel activity by activation of Ml receptor. [Pg.739]

The nAChR is cylindrical with a mean diameter of about 6.5 nm (Fig. 1). All five rod-shaped subunits span the membrane. The receptor protrades by <6 nm on the synaptic side of the membrane and by <2 nm on the cytosolic side [2]. The pore of the channel is along its symmetry axis and includes an extracellular entrance domain, a transmembrane domain and a cytosolic entrance domain. The diameter of the extracellular entrance domain is <2.5 nm and it becomes narrower at the transmembrane domain. The... [Pg.870]

Non-selective Cation Channels. Figure 1 The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) is localized within the cell membrane above the cell membrane is the synaptic cleft, below the cytoplasm. Drawing of the closed (left) and open (right) nAChR showing acetylcholine (ACh) binding and cation movement. Dimensions of the receptor were taken from references [2, 3]. [Pg.871]

Membrane-bound GTP rabs recruit effectors to the membrane. In neurons and neuroendocrine cells, the vesicle-associated Rab3 binds to rabphilin and to RIM. RIM is a component of the presynaptic cytomatrix and may thus serve as a docking receptor for synaptic vesicles at the active zone. [Pg.1059]

All these postsynaptic events last only for a few milliseconds synaptic transmission through LGICs is fast. When the postsynaptic cell membrane is sufficiently depolarized, voltage-dependent Na+ channels open and an action potential is generated. [Pg.1172]

Synaptic vesicles are the organelles in axon terminals that store neurotransmitters and release them by exocytosis. There are two types, the large dense-core vesicles, diameter about 90 nm, that contain neuropeptides, and the small synaptic vesicles, diameter about 50nm, that contain non-peptide transmitters. About ten vesicles per synapse are docked to the plasma membrane and ready for release, the readily releasable pool . Many more vesicles per synapse are stored farther away from the plasma membrane, the resting pool . When needed, the latter vesicles may be recruited into the readily releasable pool. Neuronal depolarization and activation of voltage-sensitive Ca2+... [Pg.1174]

Due to their physicochemical properties trace amines can pass the cell membrane to a limited extent by passive diffusion, with the more lipophilic PEA and TRP crossing membranes more readily than the more polar amines TYR. and OCT. In spite of these features, trace amines show a heterogeneous tissue distribution in the vertebrate brain, and for TYR. and OCT storage in synaptic vesicles as well as activity-dependent release have been demonstrated. So far, trace amines have always been found co-localized with monoamine neurotransmitters, and there is no evidence for neurons or synapses exclusively containing trace amines. [Pg.1218]

The exocytotic release of neurotransmitters from synaptic vesicles underlies most information processing by the brain. Since classical neurotransmitters including monoamines, acetylcholine, GABA, and glutamate are synthesized in the cytoplasm, a mechanism is required for their accumulation in synaptic vesicles. Vesicular transporters are multitransmembrane domain proteins that mediate this process by coupling the movement of neurotransmitters to the proton electrochemical gradient across the vesicle membrane. [Pg.1279]

Synaptic vesicles isolated from brain exhibit four distinct vesicular neurotransmitter transport activities one for monoamines, a second for acetylcholine, a third for the inhibitory neurotransmitters GABA and glycine, and a fourth for glutamate [1], Unlike Na+-dependent plasma membrane transporters, the vesicular activities couple to a proton electrochemical gradient (A. lh+) across the vesicle membrane generated by the vacuolar H+-ATPase ( vacuolar type proton translocating ATPase). Although all of the vesicular transport systems rely on ApH+, the relative dependence on the chemical and electrical components varies (Fig. 1). The... [Pg.1279]

In cerebellar Purkinje cells, a TTX-sensitive inward current is elicited, when the membrane was partially repolarized after strong depolarization. This resurgent current contributes to high-frequency repetitive firing of Purkinje neurons. The resurgent current results from open channel block by the cytoplasmic tail of the (34 subunit. The med Nav 1.6 mutant mice show defective synaptic transmission in the neuromuscular junction and degeneration of cerebellar Purkinje cells. [Pg.1307]

Goldstein DB, Hungund BL, Lyon RC Increased surface glycoconjugates of synaptic membranes in mice during chronic ethanol treatment. Br J Pharmacol 78 8-10, 1983... [Pg.45]


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Neurons, membranes synaptic vesicle fusion with

Synaptic

Synaptic plasma membrane

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