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Modeling and measurement of vesicle pools at the cone ribbon synapse: Changes in release probability are solely responsible for voltage‐dependent changes in release
Author(s) -
Thoreson Wallace B.,
Van hook Matthew J.,
Parmelee Caitlyn,
Curto Carina
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
synapse
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.809
H-Index - 106
eISSN - 1098-2396
pISSN - 0887-4476
DOI - 10.1002/syn.21871
Subject(s) - ribbon synapse , synapse , vesicle , ribbon , cone (formal languages) , biophysics , synaptic vesicle , voltage , chemistry , physics , materials science , neuroscience , biology , computer science , composite material , membrane , biochemistry , algorithm , quantum mechanics
Postsynaptic responses are a product of quantal amplitude ( Q ), size of the releasable vesicle pool ( N ), and release probability ( P ). Voltage‐dependent changes in presynaptic Ca 2+ entry alter postsynaptic responses primarily by changing P but have also been shown to influence N . With simultaneous whole cell recordings from cone photoreceptors and horizontal cells in tiger salamander retinal slices, we measured N and P at cone ribbon synapses by using a train of depolarizing pulses to stimulate release and deplete the pool. We developed an analytical model that calculates the total pool size contributing to release under different stimulus conditions by taking into account the prior history of release and empirically determined properties of replenishment. The model provided a formula that calculates vesicle pool size from measurements of the initial postsynaptic response and limiting rate of release evoked by a train of pulses, the fraction of release sites available for replenishment, and the time constant for replenishment. Results of the model showed that weak and strong depolarizing stimuli evoked release with differing probabilities but the same size vesicle pool. Enhancing intraterminal Ca 2+ spread by lowering Ca 2+ buffering or applying BayK8644 did not increase PSCs evoked with strong test steps, showing there is a fixed upper limit to pool size. Together, these results suggest that light‐evoked changes in cone membrane potential alter synaptic release solely by changing release probability. Synapse 70:1–14, 2016. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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