Effects of Ca2+ channel blockers on transmitter release and presynaptic currents at the frog neuromuscular junction (original) (raw)

Effects of Ca 2+ channel blocker neurotoxins on transmitter release and presynaptic currents at the mouse neuromuscular junction

British Journal of Pharmacology, 1997

1. The effects of the voltage-dependent calcium channel (VDCC) blockers omega-agatoxin IVA (omega-AgaIVA), omega-conotoxin GVIA (omega-CgTx), omega-conotoxin MVIIC (omega-MVIIC) and omega-conotoxin MVIID (omega-MVIID) were evaluated on transmitter release in the mouse diaphragm preparation. The effects of omega-AgaIVA and omega-MVIIC were also evaluated on the perineurial calcium and calcium-dependent potassium currents, ICa and IK(Ca), respectively, in the mouse levator auris preparation. 2. The P- and Q-type VDCC blocker omega-AgaIVA (100 nM) and P- Q- and N-type channel blockers omega-MVIIC (1 microM) and omega-MVIID (3 microM) strongly reduced transmitter release (> 80-90% blockade) whereas the selective N-type channel blocker omega-CgTx (5 microM) was ineffective. 3. The process of release was much more sensitive to omega-MVIIC (IC50 = 39 nM) than to omega-MVIID (IC50 = 1.4 microM). After almost completely blocking transmitter release (quantal content approximately 0.3% of its control value) with 3 microM omega-MVIIC, elevating the external [Ca2+] from 2 to 10 mM induced an increase of approximately 20 fold on the quantal content of the endplate potential (e.p.p.) (from 0.2 +/- 0.04 to 4.8 +/- 1.4). 4. Nerve-evoked transmitter release in a low Ca(2+)-high Mg2+ medium (low release probability, quantal content = 2 +/- 0.1) had the same sensitivity to omega-AgaIVA (IC50 = 16.8 nM) as that in normal saline solutions. In addition, K(+)-evoked transmitter release was also highly sensitive to the action of this toxin (IC50 = 11.5 nM; 100 nM > 95% blockade). The action of omega-AgaIVA on transmitter release could be reversed by toxin washout if the experiments were carried out at 31-33 degrees C. Conversely, the effect of omega-AgaIVA persisted even after two hours of toxin washout at room temperature. 5. Both the calcium and calcium-dependent potassium presynaptic currents, ICa and IK(Ca), respectively, were highly sensitive to low concentrations (10-30 nM) of omega-AgaIVA. The ICa and the IK(Ca) were also strongly reduced by 1 microM omega-MVIIC. The most marked difference between the action of these two toxins was the long incubation times required to achieve maximal effects with omega-MVIIC. 6. In summary these results provide more evidence that synaptic transmission at the mammalian neuromuscular junction is mediated by Ca2+ entry through P- and/or Q-type calcium channels.

Evidences for calcium-dependent inactivation of calcium current at the frog motor nerve terminal

Brain research bulletin, 2006

Assessment of calcium-dependent inactivation of calcium current in nerve terminals is not feasible due to technical reasons. Perineural measurement of calcium-flow, however, might be utilized as indirect means to evaluate synaptic currents. Using perineural recording from frog neuromuscular junction, supra-threshold stimuli applied to motor nerve in paired-pulse manner with varying inter-pulse intervals (5-50 ms) are demonstrated in this study to cause paired-pulse depression (PPD) of Ca(2+)-current. PPD of Ca(2+)-flow was reduced at lower extracellular Ca(2+) concentrations, in BAPTA-AM and EGTA-AM treated preparations and after replacing extracellular Ca(2+) with Sr(2+). Using perineural measurement of calcium current as an indirect model to investigate synaptic ionic activity, our findings demonstrate that PPD may be attributed to calcium-dependent inactivation of Ca(2+)-current, which may serve as negative feedback in response to massive Ca(2+) entry to motor nerve terminals. A ...

Calcium Transients and Transmitter Secretion in Different Parts of Frog Nerve Endings in Different Conditions of Calcium Ion Influx

Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology, 2020

Experiments on frog neuromuscular preparations were performed to study the characteristics of the calcium response and the quantum secretion of acetylcholine in different pats of extended nerve terminals in different conditions of calcium infl ux. A calcium-sensitive fl uorescent dye was used to analyze Ca 2+ infl ux (Ca 2+ transients) into the proximal and distal parts of nerve endings in conditions of increased K + ion content, in response to blockers of N-and L-type calcium channels, and on blockade of calcium-activated potassium channels. These studies showed that at a uniform distribution density of voltage-gated calcium channels along nerve endings, the proximal-to-distal decrement in calcium transients and quantum secretion intensity persisted in conditions of additional opening of voltage-gated calcium channels by potassium depolarization, on "thinning" of these channels using specifi c blockers, but changed on blockade of calcium-activated potassium channels.

Presynaptic facilitation at the crayfish neuromuscular junction. Role of calcium-activated potassium conductance

The Journal of General Physiology

Membrane potential was recorded intracellularly near presynaptic terminals of the excitor axon of the crayfish opener neuromuscular junction (NMJ), while transmitter release was recorded postsynaptically. This study focused on the effects of a presynaptic calcium-activated potassium conductance, gK~c~, on the transmitter release evoked by single and paired depolarizing current pulses. Blocking gK~c~) by adding tetraethylammonium ion (TEA; 5-20 mM) to a solution containing tetrodotoxin and aminopyridines caused the relation between presynaptic potential and transmitter release to steepen and shift to less depolarized potentials. When two depolarizing current pulses were applied at 20-ms intervals with g~c~ not blocked, the presynaptic voltage change to the second (test) pulse was inversely related to the amplitude of the first (conditioning) pulse. This effect of the conditioning prepulse on the response to the test pulse was eliminated by 20 mM TEA and by solutions containing 0 mM Ca2+/1 mM EGTA, suggesting that the reduction in the amplitude of the test pulse was due to activation of gK~c~ by calcium remaining from the conditioning pulse. In the absence of TEA, facilitation of transmitter release evoked by a test pulse increased as the conditioning pulse grew from -40 to -20 mV, but then decreased with further increase in the conditioning depolarization. A similar nonmonotonic relationship between facilitation and the amplitude of the conditioning depolarization was reported in previous studies using extracellular recording, and interpreted as supporting an additional voltagedependent step in the activation of transmitter release. We suggest that this result was due instead to activation of a gKtc~ by the conditioning depolarization, since facilitation of transmitter release increased monotonically with the amplitude of the conditioning depolarization, and the early time course of the decay of facilitation was prolonged when gK<ca~ was blocked. The different time courses for decay of the presynaptic potential (20 ms) and facilitation (> 50 ms) suggest either that residual Zucker, R. S., and L. O. Lara-Estrella. 1983. Post°tetanic decay of evoked and spontaneous transmitter release and a residual calcium model of synaptic facilitation at crayfish neuromuscular junctions.

P/Q-type calcium channels activate neighboring calcium-dependent potassium channels in mouse motor nerve terminals

Pflügers Archiv : European journal of physiology, 1997

The identity of the voltage-dependent calcium channels (VDCC), which trigger the Ca2+-gated K+ currents (IK(Ca)) in mammalian motor nerve terminals, was investigated by means of perineurial recordings. The effects of Ca2+ chelators with different binding kinetics on the activation of IK(Ca) were also examined. The calcium channel blockers of the P/Q family, omega-agatoxin IVA (omega-Aga-IVA) and funnel-web spider toxin (FTX), have been shown to exert a strong blocking effect on IK(Ca). In contrast, nitrendipine and omega-conotoxin GVIA (omega-CgTx) did not affect the Ca2+-activated K+ currents. The intracellular action of the fast Ca2+ buffers BAPTA and DM-BAPTA prevented the activation of the IK(Ca), while the slow Ca2+ buffer EGTA was ineffective at blocking it. These data indicate that P/Q-type VDCC mediate the Ca2+ influx which activates IK(Ca). The spatial association between Ca2+ and Ca2+-gated K+ channels is discussed, on the basis of the differential effects of the fast and ...

P-type voltage-dependent calcium channel mediates presynaptic calcium influx and transmitter release in mammalian synapses

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992

We have studied the effect of the purified toxin from the funnel-web spider venom (FTX) and its synthetic analog (sFTX) on transmitter release and presynaptic currents at the mouse neuromuscular junction. FTX specifically blocks the a-conotoxinand dihydropyridine-insensitive P-type voltage-dependent Ca2+ channd (VDCC) in cerebellar Purkinje cells. Mammalian neuromuscular transmission, which is insensitive to N-or L-type Ca2+ channel blockers, was effectively abolished by FTX and sFTX. These substances blocked the muscle contraction and the neurotransmitter release evoked by nerve stimulation. Moreover, presynaptic Ca2+ currents recorded extracellularly from the interior of the perineural sheaths of nerves innervating the mouse levator auris muscle were specifically blocked by both natural toxin and synthetic analogue. In a parallel set of experiments, K+-induced Ca'5 uptake by brain synaptosomes was also shown to be blocked or greatly diminished by FIX and sFVX. These results indicate that the predominant VDCC in the motor nerve terminals, and possibly in a significant percentage of brain synapses, is the P-type channel.

Contribution of presynaptic calcium-activated potassium currents to transmitter release regulation in cultured Xenopus nerve–muscle synapses

Neuroscience, 2001

Xenopus nerve±muscle co-cultures, we have examined the contribution of calcium-activated potassium (K Ca) channels to the regulation of transmitter release evoked by single action potentials. The presynaptic varicosities that form on muscle cells in these cultures were studied directly using patch-clamp recording techniques. In these developing synapses, blockade of K Ca channels with iberiotoxin or charybdotoxin decreased transmitter release by an average of 35%. This effect would be expected to be caused by changes in the late phases of action potential repolarization. We hypothesize that these changes are due to a reduction in the driving force for calcium that is normally enhanced by the local hyperpolarization at the active zone caused by potassium current through the K Ca channels that co-localize with calcium channels. In support of this hypothesis, we have shown that when action potential waveforms were used as voltage-clamp commands to elicit calcium current in varicosities, peak calcium current was reduced only when these waveforms were broadened beginning when action potential repolarization was 20% complete. In contrast to peak calcium current, total calcium in¯ux was consistently increased following action potential broadening. A model, based on previously reported properties of ion channels, faithfully reproduced predicted effects on action potential repolarization and calcium currents. From these data, we suggest that the large-conductance K Ca channels expressed at presynaptic varicosities regulate transmitter release magnitude during single action potentials by altering the rate of action potential repolarization, and thus the magnitude of peak calcium current.

Presynaptic calcium currents at voltage-clamped excitor and inhibitor nerve terminals of crayfish

The Journal of physiology, 1996

1. A two-electrode voltage clamp was used to record calcium currents from the excitatory and inhibitory nerve terminals that innervate the crayfish (Procambarus spp.) opener muscle. Other voltage-dependent currents were blocked with tetrodotoxin, 3,4-diaminopyridine, 4-aminopyridine and tetraethylammonium. 2. The presynaptic calcium current at both excitatory and inhibitory synapses was blocked by cadmium and omega-agatoxin IVA but was not affected by omega-conotoxin GVIA, omega-conotoxin MVIIC or nifedipine, suggesting that the calcium currents flow through P-type calcium channels. 3. Current-voltage (I-V) relations at both excitatory and inhibitory synapses are similar, with current activation near -40 mV, peak current near -10 mV and current reversal at membrane potentials greater than +25 mV. I-V relations were scaled along the current axis by partial calcium current blockade with cobalt, suggesting that series resistance and space-clamp errors were small. 4. A subset of termina...