Lecture 24- Synaptogenesis I Flashcards
What are synapses?
•Specialized junctions between neurons (or between neurons and other cells e.g. muscle cells)
What are synapses for?
-Information is transferred across synapse in one direction -from pre-synaptic neuron to post-synaptic cell ALSO used -from afferent neuron (input) to efferent neuron (output)
What are the vast majority of synapses like?
-Vas tmajority are chemical
What happens at the chemical synapse?
-neurotransmitter is released at the chemical synapse
What are the features of chemical synaptic transmission?
- Action potential reaches terminal
- Voltage gated Ca2+ channels opens
- Ca2+ enters the axon terminal
- Ca2+ makes the Neurotransmitter release and diffusion
- Neurotransmitter binds to postsynaptic receptors
- Neurotransmitter is removed from synaptic cleft
What is a neuromuscular junction?
- synapse onto skeletal muscle cell from motor neuron
- specialised synapse
- also called motor end plate
- part of motor unit (single motor neuron and all of the skeletal muscle cells it controls, motor unit is a single motor neuron and all the muscle fibres it controls, each fibre conrolled by just one neuron)
- lower motor neuron cell bodies are located in spinal cord (ventral horn) or brainstem (motor nuclei)
- lower motor neurons directly stimulate their target muscle
What is the structure of the neuromuscular junction?
- neuromuscular junction consists of multiple neurotransmitter release sites
- each is a swelling on a branch of a motor axon terminal
- postsynaptic= the muscle tissue form junctional fold, highly folded= mechanism to increase area, get more Ach
What does neuromuscular junction at high resolution?
- left= striated muscle
- bouton= the motor end plate= where the neuron terminates onto the muscle
PIC4What are three characteristic elements of synapses?
- synaptic vesicles releasing neurotransmitter
- synaptic cleft
- postsynaptic thickening or density with neurotransmitter receptor at the NMJ on tips of junctional folds (excitatory synapses have denser density than inhibitory)
What is the neuromuscular junction synaptic function?
- neurotransmitter is acetylcholine (ACh)
- postsynaptic receptor is nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR)
- ACh opens nicotinic ACh receptor channels
- Na+ and K+ ions flow inward causing the muscle depolarization (the end plate potential) (less negative) which then triggers an action potential in the muscle fibre and muscle contraction
- nicotinic receptors at 10 000/per micrometer squared at motor end plate (much lower density on extra junctional membrane)= very dense! the post synaptic density
What is used as a model for synapse development?
- Development of the NMJ as a model for synapse development
- NMJ widely used to investigate synapse development due to its large size, accessibility and relative simplicity
- great techniques to label it
- over time becomes more complex, more branched etc. in the beginning called plaque stage in the end called pretzel stage= looks like a pretzel (the branches of the axon= the terminals)
What is the development of skeletal muscle cells?
- many small myoblasts fuse to form myotube multinucleated
- myotube develops myofibrils (composed of many thousands of repeated sarcomeres)
- Muscle cell grows to many cm long, 100μm diameter
How are Ach receptors produced by muscles?
- Fusion of myoblasts into myotubes activates gene for AChR
- Nicotinic AChRs made and inserted into muscle cell membrane
- At the myotube stage, receptor density is uniform (~1000/μm2 over entire surface)
- At the mature NMJ, receptor density is 10,000/μm2 at the synapse and only 10/μm2 in non-synaptic membrane
- AChRs become highly aggregated or clustered
- at the earlier stage the receptors are distributed quite equally, then the reeceptors get clustered into the nerve terminal
How does the ACh receptor aggregation in embryonic muscle happen?
- • Early: some receptor aggregation into “hot spots” or “aneural AChR clusters” before innervation; termed pre-patterning, since they don’t occur too far from where they should be as mature
- all the pre-patterned hot spots consolidate into larger hot spots, it is the presence of the axons that make sthis happen
- • Prepatterned “hot spots” help direct the site of NMJ formation (direct in-growing axon to the central region of the muscle fibre)
- • Presence of axons leads to reduction of extra-synaptic “hot spots” and increases receptor aggregation in the sub-synaptic region by stabilizing clusters
Can ACh receptors can aggregate in regenerating muscle even after functional nerve terminals removed?
-yes
- Basal lamina between muscle and terminal at synapse
- If nerves are cut and muscle destroyed, basal lamina remains
- Muscle regrows and clusters AChRs at original sites of synapse (even though muscle denervated - no nerve activity)
- What aggregates AChRs?
- muscle already developed Ach receptor clustering, only lamina remains, the clustering occurs due to the basal lamina (sth on it)
- agrin does it!