Synaptic Physiology Section, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, and.
Laboratory of Cellular Imaging and Macromolecular Biophysics, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
J Neurosci. 2014 Jul 2;34(27):8948-62. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1022-14.2014.
Synaptic ribbons are presynaptic protein structures found at many synapses that convey graded, "analog" sensory signals in the visual, auditory, and vestibular pathways. Ribbons, typically anchored to the presynaptic membrane and surrounded by tethered synaptic vesicles, are thought to regulate or facilitate vesicle delivery to the presynaptic membrane. No direct evidence exists, however, to indicate how vesicles interact with the ribbon or, once attached, move along the ribbon's surface to reach the presynaptic release sites at its base. To address these questions, we have created, validated, and tested a passive vesicle diffusion model of retinal rod bipolar cell ribbon synapses. We used axial (bright-field) electron tomography in the scanning transmission electron microscopy to obtain 3D structures of rat rod bipolar cell terminals in 1-μm-thick sections of retinal tissue at an isotropic spatial resolution of ∼3 nm. The resulting structures were then incorporated with previously published estimates of vesicle diffusion dynamics into numerical simulations that accurately reproduced electrophysiologically measured vesicle release/replenishment rates and vesicle pool sizes. The simulations suggest that, under physiologically realistic conditions, diffusion of vesicles crowded on the ribbon surface gives rise to a flow field that enhances delivery of vesicles to the presynaptic membrane without requiring an active transport mechanism. Numerical simulations of ribbon-vesicle interactions predict that transient binding and unbinding of multiple tethers to each synaptic vesicle may achieve sufficiently tight association of vesicles to the ribbon while permitting the fast diffusion along the ribbon that is required to sustain high release rates.
突触 ribbons 是存在于许多突触中的突触前蛋白结构,它们在视觉、听觉和前庭通路中传递分级的“模拟”感觉信号。 ribbons 通常锚定在突触前膜上,并被束缚的突触小泡包围,被认为调节或促进囊泡向突触前膜的输送。然而,目前还没有直接证据表明囊泡如何与 ribbon 相互作用,或者一旦附着在 ribbon 上,如何沿着 ribbon 的表面移动到达其底部的突触前释放位点。为了解决这些问题,我们创建、验证和测试了视网膜双极细胞 ribbon 突触的被动囊泡扩散模型。我们使用轴向(明场)电子断层扫描在扫描透射电子显微镜中获得了大鼠视网膜组织中 1 μm 厚切片中视网膜双极细胞末端的 3D 结构,空间分辨率约为 3nm。然后,将这些结构与之前发表的囊泡扩散动力学估计值结合到数值模拟中,这些模拟准确地再现了电生理测量的囊泡释放/补充率和囊泡池大小。模拟表明,在生理现实条件下,拥挤在 ribbon 表面上的囊泡的扩散会产生一个流场,增强囊泡向突触前膜的输送,而不需要主动运输机制。 ribbon-vesicle 相互作用的数值模拟预测,多个 tether 与每个突触小泡的短暂结合和分离可能会使囊泡与 ribbon 紧密结合,同时允许沿着 ribbon 快速扩散,从而维持高释放率。