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- Title
Fast Subplasma Membrane Ca<sup>2+</sup> Transients Control Exo-Endocytosis of Synaptic-Like Microvesicles in Astrocytes.
- Authors
Marchaland, Julie; Calì, Corrado; Voglmaier, Susan M.; Haiyan Li; Regazzi, Romano; Edwards, Robert H.; Bezzi, Paola
- Abstract
Astrocytes are the most abundant glial cell type in the brain. Although not apposite for long-range rapid electrical communication, astrocytes share with neurons the capacity of chemical signaling via Ca2+-dependent transmitter exocytosis. Despite this recent finding, little isknownabout the specific properties of regulated secretion and vesicle recycling in astrocytes. Important differences mayexist with the neuronal exocytosis, starting from the fact that stimulus-secretion coupling in astrocytes is voltage independent, mediated by G-protein-coupled receptors and the release of Ca2+ from internal stores. Elucidating the spatiotemporal properties of astrocytic exoendocytosis is, therefore, of primary importance for understanding the mode of communication of these cells and their role in brain signaling. We here take advantage of fluorescent tools recently developed for studying recycling of glutamatergic vesicles at synapses (Voglmaier et al., 2006; Balaji and Ryan, 2007); we combine epifluorescence and total internal reflection fluorescence imaging to investigate with unprecedented temporal and spatial resolution, the stimulus-secretion coupling underlying exo-endocytosis of glutamatergic synaptic-like microvesicles (SLMVs) in astrocytes. Our main findings indicate that (1) exo-endocytosis in astrocytes proceeds with a time course on the millisecond time scale (τexocytosis= 0.24±0.017 s;τendocytosis = 0.26±0.03 s) and (2) exocytosis is controlled by local Ca2+ microdomains. We identified submicrometer cytosolic compartments delimited by endoplasmic reticulum tubuli reaching beneath the plasma membrane and containing SLMVs at which fast (time-to-peak, ∼50 ms) Ca2+ events occurred in precise spatial-temporal correlation with exocytic fusion events. Overall, the above characteristics of transmitter exocytosis from astrocytes support a role of this process in fast synaptic modulation.
- Subjects
EXOCYTOSIS; ENDOCYTOSIS; ASTROCYTES; NEUROGLIA; ABSORPTION (Physiology); BIOLOGICAL transport; NEURAL transmission; CELL membranes
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2008, Vol 28, Issue 37, p9122
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0040-08.2008