Synaptic transmission II Flashcards

1
Q

Vesicle fusion (2 types of events)

A
  • First: transport vesicle must recognize the correct target membrane
  • Second: vesicle and target must fuse.
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2
Q

The SNARE hypothesis describes via the interaction between specific pairs of transmembrane proteins, called _____, on the vesicel (_________) and the target membrane (_________), respectively.

A
  1. SNARES
  2. v-SNAREs
  3. t-SNAREs
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3
Q

Proteins involved in synaptic release are?

A
  1. Restrain vesicles
  2. Target vesicles to active zone
  3. Dock vesicles to active zone
  4. Allow fusion/exocytosis
  5. Retrieve fused membrane (recycling)
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4
Q

SNAp Receptors are?

A

Group of proteins that promote fusion of the vesicles and presynaptic membrane

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5
Q

Synapsin tethers vesicles to the cytoskeleton. _______phosphorylates Synapsin to mobilize the Reserve pool

A

CaMKII

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6
Q

Exocytosis - the SNARE hypothesis (Proteins involved)

A
-V-SNARE (vesicle-SNARE)
  Synaptobrevin (or VAMP 
-T-SNAREs (target-SNARE) 
  Syntaxin / SNAP25 
-Synaptotagmin (calcium sensor)
-Neurexins (interact with synaptotagmin)
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7
Q

Exocytosis - the SNARE hypothesis (Proteins involved)

A
  • N-ethylmaleimide sensitive factor (NSF) and α-SNAP (soluble NSF attachment protein):
  • *responsible for priming: bind SNARE, utilizes ATP to break apart complexes after fusion
  • munc-18—binds with syntaxin to inhibit SNARE complex formation
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8
Q

Synaptobrevin

A

Sits in the vesicle membrane (V-SNARE)

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9
Q

Syntaxin and SNAP-25 are anchored in the ?

A

Presynaptic membrane (T-SNAREs)

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10
Q

Synapsins

A
  • Cytoskeletal filaments
  • Regulated by cAMP-dependent kinase and Ca2+/calmodulin dependent kinase
  • Phosphorylation frees vesicles to move.
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11
Q

Rab Proteins

A

Ras superfamily of G-proteins

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12
Q

Calcium Sensor –Synaptotagmin-1

A
  • Has two C2 domains related to PKC
  • calcium sensor
  • Also aids in recycling (binds clathrin)
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13
Q

Endocytosis

Clathrin and dynamin?

A

Clathrin- forms coated pits

Dynamin-Pinches of coated vesicle

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14
Q

direction of PSP is determined by?

A
  • Ionic identity
  • Equilibrium or reversal potential
  • *EPSP= more positive than AP threshold
  • *IPSP= more negative then threshold
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15
Q

Excitatory input (one example)

A
  • Glutamate

- Permeable to Na+ and K+

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16
Q

Inhibitory input (One example)

A
  • GABA

- Permeable to Cl-

17
Q

Synaptic inhibition does what?

A
  • Reduces probability of AP
  • GABA or glycine open chloride channels (hyperpolarization)
  • Can be depolarizing and inhibitory as long as the ECl- is more hyperpolarized (negative) than the action potential threshold (C).
18
Q

Shunting inhibition

A

increase in “resting” conductance

  • *: If ECl- is equal to RMP, opening of Cl- channels does not hyperpolarize the cell, yet will act inhibitory on simultaneous EPSPs
  • *Opening of Cl- channels increases membrane conductance (reduces resistance)
19
Q

Shunting inhibition

A

No potential (but conductance) change
(if ECl- = RMP) shunting inhibition
*Hyperpolarization (if ECl- more negative than RMP