Calcium Channel Structural Determinants of Synaptic Transmission between Identified Invertebrate Neurons

We report here that unlike what was suggested for many vertebrate neurons, synaptic transmission in Lymnaea stagnalis occurs independent of a physical interaction between presynaptic calcium channels and a functional complement of SNARE proteins. Instead, synaptic transmission in Lymnaearequires the...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2003-02, Vol.278 (6), p.4258-4267
Hauptverfasser: Spafford, J. David, Munno, David W., van Nierop, Pim, Feng, Zhong-Ping, Jarvis, Scott E., Gallin, Warren J., Smit, August B., Zamponi, Gerald W., Syed, Naweed I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We report here that unlike what was suggested for many vertebrate neurons, synaptic transmission in Lymnaea stagnalis occurs independent of a physical interaction between presynaptic calcium channels and a functional complement of SNARE proteins. Instead, synaptic transmission in Lymnaearequires the expression of a C-terminal splice variant of theLymnaea homolog to mammalian N- and P/Q-type calcium channels. We show that the alternately spliced region physically interacts with the scaffolding proteins Mint1 and CASK, and that synaptic transmission is abolished following RNA interference knockdown of CASK or after the injection of peptide sequences designed to disrupt the calcium channel-Mint1 interactions. Our data suggest that Mint1 and CASK may serve to localize the non-L-type channels at the active zone and that synaptic transmission in invertebrate neurons utilizes a mechanism for optimizing calcium entry, which occurs independently of a physical association between calcium channels and SNARE proteins.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M211076200