Physical determinants of vesicle mobility and supply at a central synapse

Author:

Rothman Jason Seth1ORCID,Kocsis Laszlo2,Herzog Etienne34ORCID,Nusser Zoltan2ORCID,Silver Robin Angus1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience, Physiology and Pharmacology, University College London, London, United Kingdom

2. Laboratory of Cellular Neurophysiology, Institute of Experimental Medicine, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

3. Department of Molecular Neurobiology, Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine, Göttingen, Germany

4. Team Synapse in Cognition, Interdisciplinary Institute for Neuroscience, Université de Bordeaux, UMR 5297, F-33000, Bordeaux, France

Abstract

Encoding continuous sensory variables requires sustained synaptic signalling. At several sensory synapses, rapid vesicle supply is achieved via highly mobile vesicles and specialized ribbon structures, but how this is achieved at central synapses without ribbons is unclear. Here we examine vesicle mobility at excitatory cerebellar mossy fibre synapses which sustain transmission over a broad frequency bandwidth. Fluorescent recovery after photobleaching in slices from VGLUT1Venus knock-in mice reveal 75% of VGLUT1-containing vesicles have a high mobility, comparable to that at ribbon synapses. Experimentally constrained models establish hydrodynamic interactions and vesicle collisions are major determinants of vesicle mobility in crowded presynaptic terminals. Moreover, models incorporating 3D reconstructions of vesicle clouds near active zones (AZs) predict the measured releasable pool size and replenishment rate from the reserve pool. They also show that while vesicle reloading at AZs is not diffusion-limited at the onset of release, diffusion limits vesicle reloading during sustained high-frequency signalling.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

European Research Council

Magyar Tudományos Akadémia

European Commission

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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