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Postsynaptic Aspects of Synaptic Transmission

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Title: Postsynaptic Aspects of Synaptic Transmission


1
Post-synaptic Aspects of Synaptic Transmission
  • October 29, 2008

2
Generation of Post-Synaptic Potentials
  • Action potentials produces very brief, very large
    increase in exocytosis rate
  • synchronizes release at active zones
  • Exocytosis releases vesicles (quanta) of
    neurotransmitter into synaptic cleft (100 nm
    wide)
  • Diffuses across cleft within 2 ms concentration
    reaches 1 mM
  • Neurotransmitter binds to and opens channels
  • Ion influx produces depolarization

3
Generation of Post-Synaptic Potentials
4
Neurotransmitter Receptors
  • Response to neurotransmitter release
    (post-synaptic current) depends on
  • Receptor Type
  • Structure
  • Function
  • How channel structure is related to function
  • Post-synaptic Potentials
  • Effect of synaptic current on membrane potential
  • Electrical synapses

5
Criteria for Identification of Neurotransmitter
Acting at Neuron
  • Synthesized by Neuron
  • Neuron contains neurotransmitter
  • Neuron contains synthesizing enzymes
  • Released from nerve terminal by stimulation
  • Putative neurotransmitter applied exogenously
    reproduces effect on post-synaptic cell that
    occurs with nerve stimulation
  • Post-synaptic response depends on transmitter
    released, and post-synaptic receptor

6
Response Depends on Receptor
  • Type
  • Direct (ionotropic)
  • Modulatory (metabotropic G protein coupled)
  • Magnitude depends on
  • Number of receptors
  • State of receptors
  • Amount of neurotransmitter
  • Sign
  • Inhibitory or excitatory

7
Receptor Types
  • Ionotropic
  • Electrical response to neurotransmitter binding
  • Large, 4 to 5 subunit protein forms channel
  • Impermeable in the absence of transmitter
  • Millisecond timescale
  • Rapid onset, rapidly reversible
  • G protein coupled receptor (GPCR)
  • Single polypeptide receptor
  • Enzyme that activates GTP binding protein
  • Slow onset, long duration

8
Receptor Types
Ionotropic
Metabotropic
9
Receptor Types Example
  • Acetylcholine receptors
  • Nicotinic Ach (ionotropic)
  • Predominant type in muscle
  • Blocked by hexamethonium, curare
  • Muscarinic Ach (GPCR)
  • Predominant type in heart and CNS
  • Blocked by atropine, scopolamine
  • Receptor subtypes, e.g. m1-m4, exist within the
    major classes

10
Acetylcholine Receptors in Periphery
The Neuron, Levitan and Kaczmarek
11
Terminology (Receptors discriminated
pharmacologically)
  • Agonist
  • Molecule that binds to and activates receptor or
    channel
  • Antagonist
  • Molecule that binds to and inhibits receptor or
    channel
  • Desensitization
  • Transition to closed state in presence of
    neurotransmitter
  • Limits ion influx
  • Allosteric binding sites
  • Different than binding site of ligand
  • Modulates receptor or channel properties

12
Pharmacological Characterization
  • Pharmacological profile
  • Concentration of various agonists and antagonists
    that produce effect
  • Different ligands have different affinities for
    different receptors
  • Measured with radioligand assay
  • Maximum amount of ligand bound number of
    binding sites
  • Concentration for half binding affinity

13
The Neuron, Levitan and Kaczmarek
14
Pharmacological Characterization
  • Assay for affinity of other agonists or
    antagonists
  • Mix various concentrations of agonist or
    antagonist with saturating concentration of
    ligand
  • Affinity of agonist/antagonist is concentration
    at which half of ligand is displaced

15
Curves for different competitve antagonists A1 is
high affinity (easily displaces bound ligand) A4
is low affinity (high concentration required to
displace bound ligand)
The Neuron, Levitan and Kaczmarek
16
Ionotropic Receptors
  • Two main families, subdivided by agonist
  • Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor (nAChR) Family
  • nAChR
  • GABAA
  • Glycine
  • Serotonin
  • Glutamate Receptor Family
  • NMDA
  • Non-NMDA

17
Nicotinic AChR
  • Studied as prototype of ionotropic receptors
  • Torpedo electric organ AChR is model
  • Acetylcholine receptor
  • Nicotine is an agonist
  • a-bungarotxoin binds with high specificity
  • Used to purify the receptor
  • Affinity 10-15
  • 290 kDa

18
Nicotinic AChR structure
  • Heteropentamer
  • Each channel has 2 a, 1 b, g, d
  • Assembles into a ring forming central pore
  • Channel structure
  • Funnel extends 100 Å from outer leaflet
  • Funnel has 20-25 Å inside diameter, narrows near
    center of bilayer to form gate
  • Intracellular domains associate with proteins
    determining subcellular localization

19
Space filling model Side Top
20
Nicotinic AChR structure
  • Subunit Structure
  • 40-65 kDa each
  • 4 transmembrane segments
  • N terminus and C terminus are extracellular
  • TM2-TM3 loop is extracellular
  • TM1-TM2 and TM3-TM4 loops intracellular

21
Pore Domain and Ion Selectivity
  • TM2 regions line pore
  • 9-10 Å diameter (images of open state)
  • 8.5 Å diameter (estimated)
  • Three rings of negatively charged amino acids
    surround pore
  • Contributed to by TM2 of all subunits
  • Anions excluded due to charge repulsion
  • Cations permitted
  • monovalents preferred

22
Pore Region
Three rings of negatively charged amino acids
Figure 11.5, Byrne and Roberts
23
Binding Sites
  • Two binding sites per receptor complex
  • 30 Å from outer membrane
  • Composed of 6 amino acids of a subunit
  • Amino acids of g and d subunits contribute
  • Adjacent cysteines form disulfide link
  • Present in most ionotropic receptors
  • Binding sites not equivalent
  • Cooperative
  • Binding of 1st site facilitates binding of 2nd
    site

24
Binding Sites
  • Disulfide bond
  • C192-C193
  • D174/180 and E183/189 contact positively charged
    part of ACh

25
Binding Sites
  • Access to binding sites is through small channels
    that open into mouth of pore

Figure 11.6, Byrne and Roberts
26
Channel Opening
  • Rotation of TM2 segment
  • TM2 is a helix with kink
  • Leucine forms tight ring if kink rotated in
  • Binding causes rotation out
  • Rotation moves leucines apart
  • Serine and threonine align in central pore
  • Aides water-solvated ion permeation

27
Channel Opening
28
Summary of nAChR Function/Structure
  • ACh binding relaxes central pore, allows
    expansion of holes in lateral walls
  • Rapsyn anchors nACh to synapse

Figure 11.8, Byrne and Roberts
29
Types of nAChR
  • Muscle predominant form in periphery
  • Similar to torpedo
  • Adult has a2bed
  • Embryonic form has a2bgd
  • Subunit assembly tightly controlled to prevent
    other types from forming
  • Subunits assemble with the ER
  • includes glycosylation

30
nAChR Anchoring
  • Rapsyn bindsd to cytoplasmic tail and other
    proteins
  • MuSK (tyrosine kinase)
  • Activation recruites Src family kinases to
    phsophorylate the nAChR
  • Dystrophin-utrophin glycoprotein complex
  • Mutation leads to muscular dystrophy

Figure 11.9, Byrne and Roberts
31
Channel Kinetics
  • Open almost instantly after binding
  • Time constant 20 microseconds
  • Desensitization 50 - 100 ms
  • Kinetics controlled by g/e, d subunits
  • Mean open time 1 ms
  • Channel conductance controlled by g/e
  • Channel conductance 25 pS

32
The Neuron, Levitan and Kaczmarek
33
Types of nAChR
  • Neuronal
  • Only two subunits
  • a ?2 - ?9 (muscle is ?1)
  • ACh binding site
  • b ?2 - ?4 (muscle is ?1)
  • Many different subunit compositions exist

34
Neuronal nAChR
  • Functional receptors can be homomeric (a only) or
    heteromeric (a and b)
  • Neuronal b differ from muscle b1 by lacking
    adjacent Cys residues
  • Subunit composition is diverse, and influences
    trafficking (subcellular location) and function
  • Modulate synaptic transmission through
    pre-synaptic action
  • May play a role in learning and memory
  • Stimulation of nicotinic receptors aids memory
  • Nicotinic receptors are decreased in Alzheimers

35
Neuronal Nicotinic AchR
  • Blocked by neuronal- but not a- bungarotoxin
  • Channel kinetics and permeability controlled by
    subunit subtype
  • Neuronal nAChR conductance from 5 50 pS
  • Calcium permeability larger than for muscle
  • CaNa 1-1.5 for most subtypes
  • High calcium permeability conveyed by a7 CaNa
    20
  • Desensitization varies
  • 100 - 500 ms for some
  • 2-20 s for others

36
Post-translation Modification
  • Both muscle and neuronal types
  • Glycosylation of each subunit in ER during
    assembly of subunits
  • Required for production of receptor
  • Phosphorylation
  • kinases
  • PKA g, d
  • PKC d
  • Tyrosine kinase b, g, d
  • Intracellular loop between TM3 and TM4
  • Increase rapid phase of desensitization

37
Receptor Function
  • Presynaptic AP produces
  • Brief depolarization at excitatory synapse
  • Brief hyperpolarization at inhibitory synapse

38
Receptor Function
  • Neurotransmitter causes channels to open
  • Opening is all or none for single channels
  • Neurotransmitter increases the probability that
    channels will open
  • Does not increase the conductance of single
    channels
  • Single channel currents are tiny
  • Macroscopic currents sum of single channel
    currents
  • Mean number of open channels number of channels
    ? open probability

39
Acetylcholine Receptor Function
  • ACh binding produces current flow
  • Channel transitions to open state
  • Each opening is independent
  • Prolonged ACh application allows multiple
    openings of the same channel

40
Acetylcholine Receptor Function
  • Physiological neurotransmitter release is
    transient
  • ACh that does not bind immediately diffuses away
  • Single openings of variable duration observed
  • Repeated single openings sum to macroscopic
    current
  • Decay time constant (2.7 ms) is mean open duration

1000 channels
41
Acetylcholine Receptor Function
  • Channel conductance is independent of voltage
  • Both macroscopic conductance AND open probability
  • IV relationship is linear
  • Isyn(t) Gsyn(t) (VM-ES)
  • Channel is permeable to sodium and potassium
  • Reversal potential is 0 mV

42
Synaptic Channel Function
  • Effect of synaptic current on membrane potential
    depends on
  • reversal potential of channel
  • synaptic conductance
  • Other channels, e.g. Leak conductance
  • At steady state (no additional change in membrane
    potential), synaptic current equals leak current
    (all other channels)
  • Isyn(t) Gsyn(t) (VM-ES) -Ileak(t) -Gleak(t)
    (VM-Eleak)

43
Synaptic Channel Function
  • Can solve for membrane potential
  • Gsyn (VM-ES) -Gleak (VM-Eleak)
  • VM (GsynES GleakEleak) / (Gsyn Gleak)
  • VM is weighted sum of reversal potential and cell
    resting potential, Eleak
  • Effect of channel opening depends on reversal
    potential
  • Greater than rest produces depolarization
  • Less than rest produces hyperpolarization

44
Synaptic Channel Function
  • Steady State effect of synaptic channel
  • When GSyn0, VMEleak
  • When GSyn gtgt Gleak, VMES
  • Transients
  • Membrane doesnt depolarize instantly
  • If GS is present briefly, membrane potential will
    not reach ES

45
glycine
Ionotropic nAChR Family
GABA
  • Major subdivision is permeant ions
  • Next set of subdivisions based on physiological
    agonist

Anion
5-HT3
Cation
ACh
46
Serotonin Receptor, type 3
  • Ionotropic
  • In contrast to all other 5HT receptors
  • Homopentamer
  • Subunit most similar to a7
  • 7.6 Å diameter pore
  • Na/K permeable
  • Impermeable to calcium
  • Kinetics
  • Binding and/or opening is 10x slower than other
    ionotropic
  • Desensitization rate 1 to 5 s
  • Blocked by turbocurarine

47
Serotonin Receptor, type 3
  • Peripheral Nervous System
  • Superior cervical ganglion and Vagus nerve
  • Substantia gelatinosa
  • Facilitates release of substance P
  • Modulate nociceptive mechanisms?
  • Cortical and limbic areas
  • Anxiolytic, antidepressant, cognitive effects
  • Post-synaptic (modifies activity)
  • Predominantly GABAergic neurons
  • Modulate dopaminergic neuron activity

48
GABA receptor
  • Heteropentamer
  • a, b, g, d, r subunits
  • Multiple subtypes
  • r seen only in retina (called GABAC)
  • Channel properties depend on subunit composition
  • a
  • Two required for functional channel
  • Has high affinity GABA binding site

49
GABA receptor
  • Selective for anions
  • Chloride ions flow in
  • Hyperpolarization (reversal near -70 mV in adult)
  • Shunts excitatory currents
  • Inhibits action potential initiation
  • Also permeable to bicarbonate (HCO3-)
  • 27-30 pS is most common conductance

50
Modulation of GABA Properties
  • Allosteric binding sites that increase current
  • sedative, anti-epileptic effects
  • Benzodiazapines (Valium)
  • Binds to g subunit at interface with a
  • Potentiates GABA binding
  • Barbiturates (phenobarbitol)
  • Steroid metabolites of testosterone,
    corticosterone, progesterone

51
Potentiation of GABA binding
The Neuron, Levitan and Kaczmarek
52
Modulation of GABA Properties
  • Allosteric binding sites that decrease current
  • Seizure inducing or convulsants
  • Decrease of GABA binding
  • Bicuculline
  • Open channel blocker
  • Binds within pore
  • Prevents ion flow
  • Picrotoxin
  • penicillin

53
Modulation of GABA Properties
  • Phosphorylation
  • In vitro
  • Protein kinase A
  • Protein kinase C
  • Calcium-calmodulin kinase
  • In vivo
  • Unknown kinases
  • Unknown function

54
Glycine Receptor
  • Major inhibitory receptor in spinal cord
  • Chloride permeable
  • Heteropentamer
  • 3 a (pore forming subunit) and 2 b (modulatory
    role)
  • 3 molecules bind to open channel
  • Conductance is 35 - 50 pS
  • Blocked by Strychnine (convulsant)

55
Purinergic Receptors
  • Bind ATP (co-released with neurotransmitters) or
    adenosine
  • Most are metabotropic
  • P2x and P2z are ionotropic
  • Non-specific cation channel
  • Depolarizing
  • Subunits have two transmembrane domains

56
Glutamate Receptor Family
  • Different than Nicotinic receptor family
  • Receptors distinguished by their affinity for
  • NMDA, AMPA, Kainate, Quisqualate

Kainate KA1, KA2 (high affinity), GluR5-7 (low
affinity)
NMDA NMDAR1 NMDAR2A-D
AMPA GluR1-GluR4
57
Glutamate Receptor Agonists
Kainate
  • Quisqualic Acid also activates mGluR
  • Trans-ACPD activates mGluR

Quisqualate
a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazoleproprionic
acid
N-methyl-D-aspartic acid
The Neuron, Levitan and Kaczmarek
58
Glutamate Receptor Structure
  • Heterotetramer (1 fewer than nAChR)
  • 600 kDa (larger than nAChR)
  • Each subunit has 900 amino acids, four
    transmembrane domains
  • Large extracellular N terminal forms binding site
  • Responsible for excitatory synaptic transmission
    in the CNS and spinal cord
  • Permeable to Na/K reversal near 0 mV

59
Glutamate Receptor Function
  • AMPA subunits
  • GluR1, GluR3 subunits
  • Channels are permeable to calcium
  • Non-linear (inward rectifying) IV curve
  • GluR2 subunit
  • Homomeric channels have small conductance
  • Heterotrimeric (with GluR1 and GluR3) produces
    channels impermeable to calcium
  • Heterotrimeric channels have linear IV plot

60
Glutamate Receptors
  • Critical amino acids
  • Gln vs Arg on TM2
  • GluR2 has Arg which prevents calcium permeability
  • GluR1, 3, 4 have Gln (Q) which conveys calcium
    permeability
  • flip/flop modules
  • 38 amino acids preceding TM4
  • Flop (dominates in CA1, DG) produces larger
    desensitization
  • Flip dominates in CA3 larger currents

61
GluR Structure
  • TM2 does not cross membrane
  • Forms kink within membrane
  • Also called P element
  • Highly conserved (All GluR subunits)

Figure 11.13, Byrne and Roberts
62
Glutamate Receptors
  • Kainate Receptors
  • GluR5-7
  • 40 homology to GluR1-4
  • KA1, KA2
  • Bind kainate with high affinity
  • No functional channel when expressed alone
  • Some homology to GluR5-GluR7
  • Co-expression of KA2 with GluR6 produces AMPA
    receptor
  • KA1 has high concentration in CA3 and DG only
  • Does not form functional channels with any other
    GluR subunit

63
NMDA Receptors
  • Structure
  • Heterotetramer
  • Four TM domains per subunit
  • TM2 forms the pore
  • Not really transmembrane bends as in GluR
    subunits
  • Asn residue (at the Gln-Arg site of AMPAs TM2)
    confers calcium permeability
  • Mutation dramatically reduces calcium
    permeability
  • Part of Mg binding domain

64
NMDA Receptor
  • Subunits
  • NMDAR1
  • Can form functional channels
  • Formation of ion pore
  • 8 splice variants
  • NMDAR2A-2D
  • Requires NMDAR1 to form functional channels
  • Modulates receptor activity
  • 5-60x larger current than NMDAR1 alone
  • NMDAR2 subtype changes with development
  • NMDAR2 subtypes have different calcium
    permeability
  • Calmodulin binding site
  • 4x decrease in open channel probability

65
NMDA Receptor
  • Characteristics
  • Glycine is co-agonist
  • NMDA has 10x less affinity than glutamate
  • Time course is 5-10 x slower than AMPA
  • Calcium permeability is high
  • More so for 2B than for 2A
  • Plays a role in synaptic plasticity via calcium
    activation of kinases
  • Plays a role in neurotoxicity due to elevated
    calcium
  • Conductance 50 pS

66
NMDA Receptor
  • Characteristics (functional significance)
  • Channel opening requires glutamate and
    depolarization
  • Mg2 blocks pore at hyperpolarized potentials
  • Little current flow below -40 mV
  • Conductance depends on voltage
  • Non-linear IV curve
  • Inward Rectification

67
Antagonists
  • NMDA Receptor
  • Hallucinogenic compounds act here
  • Glutamate site blocker
  • AP5, AP7
  • Open channel blocker (Allosteric)
  • MK801 (dizocilpine)
  • Phencyclidine (PCP)
  • Become trapped when closed, difficult to wash out
  • AMPA receptor
  • DNQX
  • CNQX

68
(No Transcript)
69
Anchoring of Glutamate Receptors
  • Also called Scaffolding
  • PSD-95
  • Post-synaptic density 95
  • PDZ domains allow interaction with NMDA subunits
    and other proteins
  • Stargazin
  • Member of TARP family
  • Interacts with AMPA receptors and PSD-95
  • SAP-97

70
Glutamate Receptor Comparison
71
Glutamate Receptor Comparison
72
Basis for Cooperativity
  • Weak stimulus
  • AMPA weakly activated
  • NMDA remains blocked
  • Strong Stimulus
  • AMPA causes depolarization
  • NMDA receptor unblocked

73
Dual component PSPs
  • Both excitatory and inhibitory may be seen
  • one early (inward)
  • one late (outward)

74
Summary
  • Appreciate diversity of Receptors
  • Know general structural features
  • Heteropentamer
  • Four transmembrane (or membrane) domains
  • Definitions of agonist, antagonist,
    desensitization
  • Distinguish ionotropic vs metabotropic
  • Distinguish mechanisms of open channel blocker
    from binding site antagonist

75
Summary
  • Know major ionotropic subtypes
  • Glutamate
  • AMPA
  • NMDA
  • GABAA
  • nAChr
  • Know permeant ions, reversal potential, IV
    characteristics, effect on membrane potential
  • Definition of excitatory vs inhibitory synapse
  • Excitatory increases probability of firing
  • Inhibitory decreases probability of firing
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